begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPPHC 456
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Letsoale v Road Accident Fund
[2023] ZAGPPHC 456;
2023 (6) SA 533 (GP) (12 June 2023)
Letsoale v Road Accident Fund
[2023] ZAGPPHC 456;
2023 (6) SA 533 (GP) (12 June 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2023_456.html
sino date 12 June 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
ACTUARIAL – Road Accident Fund – Contingency fees –
Jurisdictional hurdle underpinning validity
of agreement –
Practitioner making a proper assessment of the risk of failure –
To enter into a contingency fee
agreement in instances where
success is so virtually guaranteed that no or only a negligible
contingency existed, would be
contrary to the Act and render the
CFA invalid – Four cases discussed and agreements declared
invalid in three –
Contingency Fees Act 66 of 1997
.
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 57337/2020
REPORTABLE: YES
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES
REVISED
DATE:
12 JUNE 2023
ITUMELENG
VINCENT LETSOALE
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Defendant
CASE
NO: 52869/2019
MATLOLE
COUNCIL RABOPAPE
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Defendant
CASE
NO: 70299/2018
MARY
NOMUSA MBONANI
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Defendant
CASE
NO: 54979/2018
CHRISTINAH
DORAH REASIBE MABUSO
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Defendant
Summary
:
Our courts have repeatedly warned
against the risk of abuse by the inappropriate employment of
contingency fee agreements.
Apart from those risks associated
with inappropriate use of such agreements mentioned in previous
judgments, including overreaching
often achieved thereby, it
increasingly appears that these agreements are resorted to in
instances where there are either no risk
or contingency of failure or
where no proper assessment of the risk of success has been undertaken
as required by the
Contingency Fees Act 66 of 1997
. These
agreements appear to be entered into for the sole purpose of
increasing practitioners’ fees. Such agreements
are
contrary to the provisions of the Act, constitute an abuse and are
accordingly invalid. In addition, attempts are made
at
restricting the Master’s discretion relating to the taxation of
costs on a party and party scale, by including costs items
which have
not been agreed to between the parties in draft orders tendered to
courts. Such attempts amount to abuses which
courts should not
tolerate.
ORDERS
Case no: 57337/2020
1.
It is declared that the defendant is liable
for 100% of the plaintiff’s damages suffered as a result of a
motor vehicle collision
which occurred on 24 February 2019.
2.
The defendant is ordered to pay the
plaintiff an amount of R2 462 274, 00 (Two Million Four
hundred and Sixty Two Thousand
Two hundred and Seventy Four Rand) in
respect of general damages and loss of earnings in full and final
settlement of the Plaintiff’s
claim, payable within 180 days
from date of this order.
3.
The plaintiff has nominated as his account
into which this amount must be paid, the following Trust account:
Grosskopf Attorneys,
Account Number 40[…], ABSA Bank, Branch
code: 632005, reference: D SWANEPOEL/AA0185.
4.
The defendant shall furnish the plaintiff with an undertaking
in terms of
Section 17(4)(a)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act, 56 of
1996
to pay all the costs of the future accommodation of plaintiff in
a hospital or nursing home, or treatment of or rendering of a service
or supplying of goods to him arising out of the injuries sustained by
the plaintiff in a motor vehicle collision on 24 February
2019 and
the
sequelae
thereof.
5.
The defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s taxed or
agreed party and party costs of the action.
6.
The following provisions will apply with regards to the
determination of the aforementioned taxed or agreed costs:
6.1.
The plaintiff shall serve the notice of taxation of the
plaintiff's party and party bill of costs on defendant's attorneys of
record;
6.2.
The defendant shall pay the plaintiffs' taxed and/or agreed
party and party costs within 14 (fourteen) days from the date upon
which
the accounts are taxed by the Taxing Master and/or agreed
between the parties; and
6.3.
Should the payment of the taxed or agreed costs not be
effected timeously, the plaintiff will be entitled to interest at the
applicable
rate from the date of the allocator to the date of
payment.
7.
It is noted that there is a valid
Contingency Fee Agreement in place.
Case no: 52869/2019
1.
By agreement between the parties the
defendant is ordered to pay the Plaintiff a capital amount of
R4 795 234.00 (Four
Million Seven Hundred Ninety Five
Thousand Two Hundred Thirty Five Rand) as full and final settlement
into the following bank account:
Account Holder: ET Nkuna
Attorneys Incorporated, Bank Name: Nedbank, Branch Name: Brooklyn,
Branch Code: 16314500, Account No:
12[…], Type of Account:
Trust Account.
2.
The above-mentioned capital is payable within the period of 180 days
from date
of settlement of this matter. In the event of the capital
not being paid within 180 days, mora interest will run at the
applicable
interest rate until date of payment.
3.
The defendant is ordered t
o furnish the
plaintiff with an undertaking in terms of
Section 17(4)(a)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act, 56 of 1996
for the reasonable cost of the
future accommodation of the plaintiff in a hospital or nursing home
or treatment of or rendering
of a service to him or supplying of
goods to him resulting from the accident related injuries sustained
by the plaintiff and the
costs of administering and enforcement of
this undertaking, as a result of the motor vehicle collision which
occurred on the 04
th
December 2017.
4.
The defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s taxed or agreed
party and
party costs of the action.
5.
The aforementioned taxed or agreed party and party costs, once
determined, must
also be paid to the Plaintiff’s Attorneys, ET
Nkuna Attorneys Inc. by direct transfer into their aforementioned
trust account
and in the event that such costs are not agreed the
plaintiff shall serve on the defendant’s Attorneys notice of
taxation
and the plaintiff shall allow the defendant fourteen (14)
ordinary days from the date of taxation/settlement of costs to make
such
payment. In the events of the cost not being paid within
14 days as aforesaid, interest will run at the applicable interest
rate till date of payment.
6.
The Contingency Fee Agreements between the plaintiff and his
attorneys are declared
invalid.
Case no: 70299/2018
1.
By agreement between the parties, it is declared that the
defendant is liable for 100% of the plaintiff’s damages
suffered
as a result of a motor vehicle collision which has occurred
on 26 January 2018.
2.
The defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff the amount of
R812 999.55 (Eight Hundred and Twelve Thousand, Nine Hundred and
Ninety
Nine Rand, Fifty Five Cents) in respect of past and future
loss of support within 180 days from the date of this order and as
full
and final settlement of this matter.
3.
The defendant will not be liable for interest on the capital
amount should same be paid before or on the date calculated in terms
of paragraph 2 supra failing which the defendant will be liable for
interest calculated at the applicable prescribed rate of interest
from time to time from date of judgment.
4.
The defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s taxed or
agreed party and party costs up to the date hereof.
5.
Payment of the capital amount as set out in paragraph 2 supra
hereof, shall be made into the following bank account: Bank: STANDARD
BANK; Account Holder: STRYDOM ING; Account Number: 01[…];
Account Type: TRUST; Branch Code: 014845; Reference: 3071.
6.
The contingency fee agreement entered into between the
plaintiff and her attorneys is declared invalid.
Case
no: 54979/2018
1.
By agreement between the parties the
defendant is ordered to furnish the plaintiff with an undertaking in
terms of
section 17(4)
(a) of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
,
for the costs of future accommodation in a hospital or a nursing home
or treatment of or rendering of a service or supplying of
goods to
the plaintiff after such costs have been incurred and on proof
thereof, relating to the injuries sustained by the plaintiff
as a
result of a collision which occurred on 27 October 2017.
2.
By agreement the defendant is ordered to
pay the Plaintiff an amount of R 900 000.00 (Nine Hundred
Thousand Rands only) in
respect of general damages suffered by the
Plaintiff, payable within 180 days from the date of this acceptance
and such amount
to paid into the plaintiff’s attorneys of
record trust account with the following details: ACCOUNT HOLDER:
BALOYI (T.S) &
MOROBE ATTORNEYS INC, BANK NAME: FNB,
ACCOUNT NO: 62[…], BRANCH NAME: PRETORIA, BRANCH CODE:
251445,
REF’S NUMBER: RAF0098/TS/MVA.
3.
The defendant will not be liable for
interest on the above mentioned amount, save in the event of failing
to pay on the due date,
in which event the defendant will be liable
to pay interest on the outstanding amount at the prescribed rate of
interest from time
to time.
4.
The defendant is ordered to pay the taxed
or agreed party and party costs of the plaintiff in this action to
date hereof.
5.
The issues relating to the quantum of the
remainder of the plaintiff’s claims are postponed sine die.
6.
The contingency fee agreement between the
plaintiff and her attorney is declared invalid.
JUDGMENT
These
matters have been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division.
The judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
Contingency
fee agreements (CFAs) serve a laudable goal of assisting indigent
plaintiffs in realizing their rights of access to
courts and to
justice. These types of agreements are prevalent in actions
against the Road Accident Fund (the RAF).
[2]
During the
course of a week of sitting in the court dealing with default
judgments and settled RAF matters, numerous matters raised
concerns
of abuse of either the CFA regime or the manner in which
practitioners appearing for plaintiffs in RAF matters seek to
fetter
the discretion of the Taxing Master when costs orders on the scale as
between party and party are sought or agreed on.
I shall deal
with the issue of the CFA regime before separately dealing with four
matters which came before this court and which
prompted this judgment
and thereafter deal with the issue of costs manifested by these four
matters.
The
CFA regime
[3]
This
issue has featured in many judgments and it is therefore unnecessary
to detail the scheme of the CFA regime, as that has already
been
done
[1]
. I shall therefore
deal with the relevant features as succinctly as possible.
[4]
At
common law, CFAs were prohibited. CFAs have only become
legitimized by the
Contingency Fees Act 66 of 1997
, which came into
operation on 23 April 1999 (the Act)
[2]
.
[5]
It
follows that all CFAs which fall foul of the Act are legally
invalid
[3]
.
[6]
The
Act allows a practitioner to enter into an agreement with his or her
client that the practitioner shall not be entitled to any
fees for
services rendered in legal proceedings unless such client is
successful in such proceedings
[4]
or that the practitioner, if successful in claims sounding money, may
be entitled to a “success fee” of up to 100%
of his or
her “normal fees” on condition that such success fees may
not exceed 25% of the total of the claim
[5]
.
[7]
The
“normal fees” must be agreed to in writing in the CFA and
is despite its attorney and own client nature, still subject
to the
principle of reasonableness
[6]
.
[8]
A
CFA must be entered into and signed by both parties at a sufficiently
early stage of the proceedings to enable the requirements
of the Act
to be complied with. This includes the requirement that the 14
day “opt-out” period for the client
remains effective.
Whether a CFA was timeously concluded, is dependent largely on the
nature of the particular proceedings
and whether compliance with the
Act was reasonably possible at that stage
[7]
.
[9]
An
invalid agreement cannot be replaced by a subsequent agreement which
seeks to improve or replace those aspects of an invalid
prior
agreement
[8]
.
[10]
Once
a CFA is found to be invalid, a practitioner is under the common law
only entitled to a reasonable fee in relation to the work
performed.
The reasonableness of such a fee is determined by taxation of a bill
of costs and is subject to the discretion
of the Taxing Master
[9]
.
[11]
The
requirements for a valid CFA, in addition to those referred to above
in relation to the timing thereof, are that the agreement
must
substantially comply with the prescribed form. It must also
reflect the particulars of the proceedings to which it relates
and
state that, before the agreement was entered into, the client had
been advised of other ways of financing the litigation, was
informed
of the nature and extent of the success fees and that he or she
understood the agreement
[10]
.
[12]
The
Act also provides for judicial oversight over CFAs in matters which
are settled whilst being “before court” and
oversight by
the Legal Practice Council (LPC) when matters are settled without
being “before court”
[11]
.
This oversight requires that affidavits be produced by the legal
practitioner and his or her client, dealing with the contents
of the
settlement
[12]
.
[13]
The most
important principle pertaining to CFAs for purposes of this judgment
is that they should be entered into where the practitioner
has made a
proper assessment of the risk of failure (or conversely, the
prospects of success) of his or her client’s case
and was
prepared to share that risk with the client. This is the
jurisdictional hurdle underpinning the validity of a CFA.
In
this regard section 2(1) expressly provides that “…
notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any law or the common law, a legal
practitioner may,
if
in his opinion there are reasonable prospects that his or her client
may be successful in proceedings
,
enter into a …
”
CFA with such client. (my emphasis)
[14]
The “reward”
created by a CFA for a practitioner by potentially doubling his or
her fees is not intended as compensation
for funding the disbursemnts
of a case – these must be catered for separately. The
“reward” of a doubled
fee is also not meant to be a
compensation for the attorney having to wait until a matter is
concluded and the defendant (in the
majority of cases, the RAF) has
made payment – in fact, a great many practitioners do
this in any event without resorting
to CFAs.
[15]
Our
courts have understood the principles applicable to CFAs to be “…
that
the legal practitioner charges his normal fee and, as an added
incentive,
to
compensate him for the risk of undertaking the litigation
,
he be rewarded by being permitted to agree with his client to charge
an extra fee over and above his normal fee, either equal
to or a
percentage increase on the normal fee
”
[13]
(again, my emphasis). Not only do I respectfully align myself
with this pronouncement of the law but, coming from a full
court, it
also carries considerable weight. This interpretation of the
Act, with reference to
PWC
,
in my view properly enunciates the context within CFAs have been
legitimised
[14]
.
[16]
The
“contingency” contemplated in the Act does not find
application where a case is hopeless and has no reasonable prospects
of success. To assist a client to pursue such an action would
be to act contrary to Clause 3.10 of the Code of Conduct applying
to
legal practitioners
[15]
.
Logically, the converse would also hold true – where there is
no risk or contingency of failure the Act should also
find no
application. Properly interpreted, the Act only permits a legal
practitioner in instances where, after proper assessment,
he or she
has determined that there are some risks attached to the client’s
case, but that there is a reasonable prospect
of success and that the
practitioner is prepared to share in that risk for the reward of a
“success fee”.
[17]
The
fact that the Act also provides for CFA’s on a “no win,
no fee” basis i.e one without an additional “reward”,
confirms the interpretation that something more must be present in a
matter before a practitioner becomes entitled to doubling
of his or
her fees or effectively sharing in the spoils of successful
litigation in monetary terms. This “additional”
element is the risk or contingency attached to the merits of the
case. It is the sharing in the “speculative”
nature
[16]
of otherwise
doubtful litigation by the practitioner with his client, that
entitles the practitioner to the “reward”
reflected by
the success fee.
[18]
The
Act is also not intended to be “…
a
mechanism for a legal practitioner to charge fees that are
unreasonable and to unjustifiably increase his [or her] fees simply
to place him [or her] in apposition to recover the maximum of the
success fee which the Act allows
”
[17]
.
[19]
The
assessment of the merits or prospects of success of a client’s
case, requires “…
that
before entering into the agreement, a full and proper assessment of
the client’s prospects of being successful in the
proceedings
be undertaken
”
[18]
.
[20]
In
reinforcement hereof, our courts have required practitioners to enter
into CFAs at an early stage in the litigation and not when
fees have
already been incurred but not yet claimed and which are then
“doubled” by later or even belated CFAs, often
shortly
before culmination or settlement of the matter. Such CFAs have
been found to be contrary to the Act and invalid
[19]
.
[21]
Because
of the speculative nature of litigation wherein a practitioner’s
fees are governed by a CFA and to “…
minimize
the disadvantages inherent in the contingency fee system and to guard
against its abuse …
”
the safeguards and oversight functions provided for in sections 2, 3
and 4 of the Act have been promulgated
[20]
.
[22]
An
abuse of process exists where a process or mechanism “…
is
divested from its true course so as to … achieve an improper
end…
”
[21]
.
[23]
To
enter into a CFA in instances where success is so virtually
guaranteed that no or only a negligible contingency existed,
would be contrary to the Act and render the CFA invalid
[22]
.
The same would apply when no proper assessment of any risk has been
undertaken. The vast majority of actions instituted
against the
RAF fall into these two categories. Why do certain
practitioners then enter into these agreements and not simply
either
wait until culmination of the litigation for their fees or enter into
a “no win, no fee” agreement? The
only inference is
that it is a simple mechanism where practitioners in effect double
their fees with little or no risk. This amounts
to an “improper
end” and an abuse.
[24]
Of
course, there are many instances where there may be a risk, but they
have to be properly assessed and the determination must
be
case-specific
[23]
. In a
recent and as yet unreported judgment
[24]
Roelofse (then AJ) complained that practitioners merely use templates
for the affidavits of themselves and their clients when presenting
CFAs to court for judicial scrutiny. He exasperatedly put it
thus: “
Surely
it would not be too difficult to disclose to the court, as part of
the requirements for the section 4(2) affidavit what the
prospects of
success were
”.
I have, in the four matters under consideration, enquired from the
practitioners who had presented the matters to
court for scrutiny,
particulars as to the merits of the matters, and the reasons for the
dates of and considerations involved in
the CFAs. In some
instances the court was furnished by explanatory affidavits by the
attorneys involved. I shall deal
with each of the matters and
“their” CFAs hereunder and thereafter deal with the issue
of how practitioners appear
to attempt to fetter the discretion of
the Taxing Master when they seek costs on a party and party scale.
Case
no: 57337/2020
[25]
This
matter came before court as an application for judgment by default.
The claim had been lodged with the RAF on 6 November
2019 and summons
was subsequently served on 3 November 2020. A notice to defend
had been delivered on 23 May 2022.
A notice of bar to plead had
been delivered on 13 July 2022 but elicited no response by way of
pleading. The matter was subsequently
set down on 4 August 2023
for hearing on 22 February 2023.
[26]
What had
transpired in the meantime, however, was that the RAF had accepted
100% liability as a result of the negligence of the
insured driver.
This had been done as long ago as on 19 March 2020. There is no
explanation for the two years’
lack of inactivity from then
onwards until the delivery of the notice to defend, which was
followed by an offer from the RAF, which
included amounts for general
damages and loss of earnings. The offer was however not
acceptable to the plaintiff.
[27]
The plaintiff,
who was a trackless machine operator, was a passenger in a “bakkie”
with unknown particulars, which had
overturned on a rural junction of
two roads in the Brits district on 24 February 2019. He
sustained a traumatic head injury,
a perforated tympanic membrane
which left him with partial loss of hearing, soft tissue facial
injuries and was left with cervicogenic
headaches, aggravated by
psychological stress, orthostatic hypotension and residual cognitive
and a progressively deteriorating
post-traumatic stress disorder.
[28]
The plaintiff
had acquired reports from a neurosurgeon, neuropsychologist, an ear,
nose and throat specialist, as forensic psychiatrist,
an occupational
therapist, and industrial psychologist and an actuary. Their
reports have been confirmed by way of affidavits
accepted in terms of
Rule 38. Based on the contents of the reports and the actuarial
calculations, proper application of
contingencies and consideration
of case law regarding non-pecuniary damages, an amount of
R1 812 271,00 was awarded as
loss of earings and R600 00,00
as general damages.
[29]
The
contingency fee agreement presented to court provided for a 100%
increase of the attorney fees as a success fee or 25% of the
claim,
whichever is the lesser. In form and content, it complied with
the Act and was accompanied by the necessary affidavits
by the
attorney and the plaintiff. It was, however, entered into on 11
October 2021, which prompted enquiries from the court.
The
answer was that this was a second CFA and that an explanation could
be furnished for its existence.
[30]
The matter was
postponed and the attorney was allowed to file an explanatory
affidavit prior to the reservation of judgment.
In her
affidavit the attorney explained that she was the attorney who had
initially attended to the plaintiff’s matter since
her initial
consultation with him on 27 February 2019. She was then the
only attorney in the practice of Ayob and Associates,
(an
incorporated firm of attorneys) to whom the plaintiff had furnished a
power of attorney. The attorney, Ms Swanepoel,
decided to leave
Ayob and Associated on 28 September 2021. By that time, she was
still the only attorney in the practice
and a director thereof.
She held 33⅓ of the shareholding in the company at the time and
66,6% shareholding was held
by another attorney, who was a director
of another law firm, Mothle, Jooma and Sabdia (MJS). Upon her
resignation, Ms Swanepoel
did not resign as director as she was
uncertain of the intentions the other shareholder. Concerned
about absenting herself
from the practice as its only attorney, she
approached the LPC for advice. She was advised to inform all
clients of Ayob
and Associates of her departure and to advise them of
their rights. The clients could remain with Ayob and
Associates, should
a new attorney be appointed, or furnish new
attorneys (including the current attorneys of record at which Ms
Swanepoel subsequently
became a director) with the necessary mandates
or the files would be sent to the LPC for safekeeping or distribution
to their panel
of attorneys for finalization.
[31]
Hereafter the
following chain of events occurred, which was confirmed by a separate
affidavit from the plaintiff: he was contacted
by MJS and was called
to their offices where he was requested to sign a power of attorney
in their favour. He was uncomfortable
with the situation, left
the offices, telephoned Ms Swanepoel’s assistant and met up
with them. He was then advised
of the LPC’s advices
whereafter he terminated the mandate with Ayob and Associates and
gave his current attorneys a mandate.
It was then that the
second CFA was entered into with the plaintiff on the same day.
[32]
Both the
plaintiff and Ms Swanepoel saw the CFA of 11 October 2021 as a
continuation of the initial CFA albeit with a new firm of
attorneys.
I find that, in these circumstances, this CFA does not fall foul of
the judgment in
Tjatji
and neither does it contravene the Act. I had regard to the
uncertainty of the identity of the insured driver and lack of
particularity of his vehicle as well as the foreseeable difficulties
in obtaining witnesses. Even the accident report form
is, save
for the plaintiffs description, devoid of particulars and virtually
blank and uncompleted. I am accordingly satisfied
that there had been
a sufficient, albeit small, “contingency” regarding the
prospects of success to justify the CFA.
I consequently find it
to be compliant with the Act and therefore valid.
Case
no 52869/2019
[33]
This matter
came before court as one enrolled on this court’s (then)
settlement roll. The particulars of claim indicated
that the
plaintiff had been a passenger in a vehicle which had overturned on 4
December 2017. In the summons issued on 24
July 2019, damages
of some R7.3 million was claimed from the RAF, who had subsequently
entered an appearance to defend on 30 July
2019. A plea was
delivered on 18 September 2019. The (then) Trials Interlocutory
Court had ordered the RAF on 13 September
2021 to attend a pre-trial
conference. Upon the RAF’s failure to do so, its defence
was struck out on 12 April 2022.
[34]
The matter was
subsequently settled by the plaintiff’s acceptance of an offer
made by the RAF on 20 February 2023, to pay
R 3 895 235,00
in respect of loss of earnings and R 900 000,00 in respect
of general damages. An undertaking
in terms of
section 17(4)(a)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
was also offered, together
with a tender to pay the plaintiff’s “…
taxed
or agreed party and party costs, on the appropriate scale …
”.
The offer was accepted in writing on the same day. This
settlement precluded the court from scrutinising its contents
for
propriety, save for the issue of the CFA.
[35]
The CFA was
only entered into on 25 January 2022, which again, prompted enquiries
from the court. As with the previous matter,
the current
attorneys delivered an explanatory affidavit. In it the reason
for the date of the CFA was explained. It
was, in almost
similar fashion as the previous matter, intended to simply replace a
prior CFA entered into between the plaintiff
and his initial
attorneys on 4 December 2018. The attorney, Ms Nkuna explained
that “
there
shall be no duplicate payment of fees as the client is in no worse
situation than would be the case if represented by the
same legal
practice from the beginning to the end
”
and “…
the
legal practices involved have per agreement cooperated and
collaborated to advance the interests of the client and shall share
pro-rate at the end of the process which they shall fix themselves
based on the activities undertaken by the respective legal
practices
”.
[36]
In this matter
the plaintiff had also been a passenger in a motor vehicle which had
overturned, causing him to sustain injuries.
In
contradistinction to the previous matter however, the name of the
insured driver, the particulars of the vehicle and a completed
accident report had been available. There was no discernable
contingency risk of the plaintiff not being able to prove 1%
negligence on the part of the insured driver and the merits have been
100% conceded at the first pre-trial conference held on 4
March
2020. Hereafter the matter proceeded only in respect of the
issue of quantum.
[37]
In similar
fashion as in all four of the matters under consideration and in
fact, in respect of virtually all matters where practitioners
seek to
justify their motivation to enter into CFAs in terms of which they
double their fees by agreeing to a success fee equal
to 100% of their
“normal” fees, Ms Nkuna argued in her affidavit that “…
the absence
or presence of any discernable risk is not a test to determine if the
matter can be handled on Contingency Fee basis
or not but the crucial
element is that there should be a reasonable prospect of success if
the legal suit is to be pursuit (sic)
on that basis
”.
Without furnishing any particularity at all of any risks in this
particular matter, she submitted that “…
in
any legal suit there are all manner of risks which may affect the
outcome of the legal suit …
”.
[38]
This
approach illustrates the attitude of practitioners who choose not to
be content with charging their normal fees and to wait
until the
finalization of the matter for the recovery or payment thereof or
those practitioners who enter into “no win, no
fee”
agreements, but without any difference from those matters in respect
of the risk or lack of prospects of success, choose
to “double”
their fees by entering into CFA’s. Without labelling such
conduct as avaricious, there is also
no explanation why those
practitioners do not consider apportioning any risk that there might
be by limiting their success fees
to 10% or 20% or any percentage
lesser than the full 100% which the Act caters for
[25]
.
[39]
In this
matter, apart from the “continuation” of the agreement
from one legal practitioner to the next by way of successive
agreements, there was no risk from the start, i.e no “contingency”
or “reasonable prospect”, the success
was without doubt.
The claim was simply, as in the majority of similar claims against
the RAF, a matter of going through
the proceedings of compiling all
the relevant evidence. The only “contingency” was
how big the eventual payment
sounding in money was going to be.
I therefore find that the initial agreement, was invalid.
Consequently, it also
invalidates the later CFA, entered into when
any risk of not being successful had even more been extinguished.
Case
no 70299/2018
[40]
This matter
similarly came before the court by way of settlement. It is a
claim by a biological unmarried mother for the loss
of support as a
result of the death of her son who had been living with her and who
has been her sole provider. There was
no doubt about the
identity of the parties, corroborated by birth and death
certificates, nor about the issue of the plaintiff’s
dependency, which had been corroborated by affidavits of five
witnesses. The issue of negligence of the insured driver in
whose vehicle the deceased had been a passenger, had been placed by
beyond doubt by way of a police docket, indicating that the
insured
driver had been found guilty of culpable homicide. Accordingly,
should the claim be properly and accurately calculated,
there could
be no foreseeable dispute or risk of failure.
[41]
The industrial
psychologist’s report, and salary slips led to a simple
actuarial calculation. After having delivered
a plea on 19
February 2018 in response to the summons whereby action had been
instituted on 26 September 2018, the RAF’s
defence was struck
out on 9 May 2022 for having failed to comply with a court order
compelling the RAF to attend a pre-trial conference.
[42]
The matter had
thereafter become settled after the plaintiff’s acceptance of
an offer made on 20 January 2023 which, as is
customary, included a
tender to pay taxed or agreed costs on a party and party scale.
[43]
In this matter
there was again no risk of not being successful in the prosecution of
the claim, but an CFA was, without explanation,
entered into and then
only on 27 January 2020.
[44]
The CFA in
this matter falls foul of the Act and should be therefore declared
invalid.
Case
no 54979/2018
[45]
This matter
also came before the court by way of settlement. The plaintiff
was a passenger in a vehicle driven by the insured
driver who had
collided with a stationary motorcycle. The accident must have
been a serious affair as the plaintiff had sustained
excruciating
injuries, both orthopeadic and otherwise. The plaintiff, having
been heavily pregnant at the time, tragically
lost her unborn child,
which understandably caused extensive psychological and emotional
trauma.
[46]
This
“one-percenter” action was instituted on 1 August 2018.
After various undue delays, the pleadings were amended
on 4 October
2022 to increase the claim but not before a CFA was entered into on
22 June 2022.
[47]
Pursuant to
the acceptance of an offer made on 8 February 2023, the issue of
general damages in the amount of R900 000,00 and
the furnishing
of a
Section 17(4)(a)
undertaking, became settled. Although not
expressly mentioned, this implied an acceptance of liability by the
RAF.
Again, the accepted offer included a tender to pay the
plaintiff’s taxed or agreed costs on a party and party scale.
[48]
A CFA was
entered into on 22 June 2022. There was no explanation for the
lateness in the proceedings at which the CFA was
entered into, nor of
any perceived risk of failure or contingency in the matter.
Strangely, the draft order presented to
court, erroneously stated
that no CFA had been entered into. In the absence of any
explanation tendered for the belatedly
agreed CFA, it should be
declared contrary to the Act and therefore invalid.
The
costs orders included in the drafts presented to the court
[49]
As already set
out above, in each of the instances the respective plaintiffs became
entitled to costs of suit on a party and party
scale, either by
default (in case no 57337/2020) or by way of acceptance of the RAF’s
tender in this regard (in all the settled
matters).
[50]
Despite the
above, none of the draft orders presented to court, merely contained
a prayer for payment of costs of suit on a party
and party scale
(either as taxed or agreed costs).
[51]
All of the
draft orders, in similar fashion as has apparently become the
standard practice by practitioners representing plaintiffs
in claims
against the RAF in this division, included prayers which indicated
that the costs which the RAF had to pay “will”
include a
number of items. These included a whole list ranging from all
attorneys’ consultations with counsel, counsel’s
fees for
drafting of heads argument on default judgment, the costs of
uploading bundles onto Caselines, costs of obtaining specified
lists
of expert reports, the experts’ “preparation and
reservation fees”, certain traveling fees of attorneys
and the
plaintiffs, costs of “sorting, arranging and compiling of
bundles” and other items.
[52]
It is not the
purpose of this judgment to revisit the principles applicable to
orders of costs on a party and party scale or the
taxation thereof.
It is however, due to the practice of practitioners to persistently
seek to insert qualifications to such
an order in their drafts
presented to court, apposite to remind parties of the purpose and
nature of a costs order and its taxation.
This is to be found
in
Rule 70(3)
of the Uniform Rules, which provides as follows:
“
with
a view to affording the party who have been awarded an order for
costs a full indemnity for all costs reasonably incurred by
him in
relation to his claim or defence and to ensure that all such costs
shall be borne by the party against whom such order has
been awarded,
the taxing master shall, on every taxation, allow all such costs,
charges and expenses as appear to him to have been
necessary or
proper for the attainment of justice or for defending the rights of
any party, but save as against the party who incurred
the same , no
costs shall be allowed which appear to the taxing master to have been
incurred or increased through over-caution,
negligence or mistake, or
by payment of a special fee to an advocate or special charges and
expenses to witnesses or to other person
or by other unusual
expenses”
.
[53]
The
unfettered discretion of the Taxing Master to implement and apply the
above Rule in every taxation, is also beyond doubt
[26]
.
[54]
It
is therefore unnecessary for plaintiffs to seek to add particularity
to a simple costs order issued by a court. Courts
have also
themselves been cautioned to not fetter the Taxing Master’s
discretion in the performance of its duties
[27]
.
Insofar as practitioners seek to incorporate words such
as “will include” into a court order when listing
items,
such efforts encroach on the terrain of the Taxing Master. It
is an attempt to bind the hands of a Taxing Master by
way of a court
order, which is impermissible.
[55]
In addition to
the above, the attempts at inserting qualifying fees for experts into
party and party costs orders, partially convert
those orders to
orders awarding costs on an attorney and client scale, as I shall
explain hereunder.
[56]
Qualifying
fees (including preparation fees) are expenses incurred or charged by
an expert witness in order “
to
make himself or herself eligible or qualified to adduce evidence …
it is not the costs for drafting a report
”
[28]
.
[57]
On
taxation of a bill of costs on a party and party scale, the
qualifying fees of a witness are not allowed without an order of
court or the consent of all interested parties
[29]
.
This also applies to medical witnesses and actuaries
[30]
.
[58]
It
has happened in the past that insurance companies in the position of
the RAF under previous statutory regimes catering for claims
pursuant
to motor vehicle accidents have, when a matter has become settled,
agreed to pay “…
taxed
costs as between party and party, plus such medico-legal fees as are
allowed by the Taxing Master”
.
In such a case, it has been found that the “medico-legal fees”
referred to in the agreement must have, having
regard to the stage of
litigation upon which is had been tendered, “embraced”
any qualifying fees for such medical
witnesses”
[31]
.
[59]
Contrary
to the above, the RAF, in making offers to settle claims against it,
invariably only offers to pay agreed or taxed party
and party costs.
It has done so in all the settled matters forming the subject of this
judgment. Offers formulated
like that exclude qualifying
fees
[32]
.
[60]
What
should a plaintiff then do if it wishes to recover qualifying fees of
its experts? It must either obtain an offer or
tender or
consent in this regard from the RAF or such orders must expressly be
requested from the court. In the last-mentioned
instance,
proper notice must be given to the RAF that such an order will be
applied for, to enable the RAF to be heard on this
aspect
[33]
.
In view of the current practice whereby in many instances (if not the
majority) expert evidence is nowdays presented by
way of affidavit as
contemplated in Rule 38, it is an open question as to whether experts
still prepare themselves to give evidence
in respect of matters
proceeding by default (let alone those which have become settled) but
again, this would be a question of
fact in each case and subject to
the provision of proof, either to court or on taxation.
[61]
In some
instances (such as in case no 70299/18) practitioners attempt to
obtain the consent of the RAF for the insertions of the
above costs
aspects into a draft order by obtaining a letter or telefax from a
claims handler, confirming the contents of the draft
order to be
presented to court. Although such a consent letter was obtained
by email in case no 70299/2018, the “confirmation”
erroneously stated that “…
the
contents of the said settlement agreement and order is in accordance
with the Road Accident Fund offer …
”
when it clearly wasn’t insofar as the issue of costs were
concerned. Significantly the “consent letter”
ends
with the following “
Costs
is also tendered on High Court Scale and are also subjected (sic) to
the discretion of the taxing master
”.
This conclusion accords with the initial accepted offer. The
purported “consent” to the insertion
of qualifying fees
by way of a draft order, is therefore not an unambiguous consent or
something which this court could find would
amount to a novation or
replacement of the accepted offer. It is therefore
disregarded. In each case an order should
only be made in terms
which accord with the proven settlement, that is the unambiguous
offer and its equally unambiguous acceptance.
[62]
It follows
that the costs orders sought in the settled matters which went beyond
that agreed upon will be reduced to orders for
payment of agreed or
taxed costs on a party and party scale. The same will apply to
the default judgment in case no 57337/2020.
Order
[63]
Accordingly
the following orders are granted:
Case no: 57337/2020
1.
It is declared that the defendant is liable
for 100% of the plaintiff’s damages suffered as a result of a
motor vehicle collision
which occurred on 24 February 2019.
2.
The defendant is ordered to pay the
plaintiff an amount of R2 462 274, 00 (Two Million Four
hundred and Sixty Two Thousand
Two hundred and Seventy Four Rand) in
respect of general damages and loss of earnings in full and final
settlement of the Plaintiff’s
claim, payable within 180 days
from date of this order.
3.
The plaintiff has nominated as his account
into which this amount must be paid, the following Trust account:
Grosskopf Attorneys,
Account Number 40[…], ABSA Bank, Branch
code: 632005, reference: D SWANEPOEL/AA0185.
4.
The defendant shall furnish the plaintiff with an undertaking
in terms of
Section 17(4)(a)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act, 56 of
1996
to pay all the costs of the future accommodation of plaintiff in
a hospital or nursing home, or treatment of or rendering of a service
or supplying of goods to him arising out of the injuries sustained by
the plaintiff in a motor vehicle collision on 24 February
2019 and
the
sequelae
thereof.
5.
The defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s taxed or
agreed party and party costs of the action.
6.
The following provisions will apply with regards to the
determination of the aforementioned taxed or agreed costs:
6.1
The plaintiff shall serve the notice of taxation of
plaintiff's party and party bill of costs on defendant's attorneys of
record;
6.2
T
he defendant shall pay the
plaintiffs' taxed and/or agreed party and party costs within 14
(fourteen) days from the date upon which
the accounts are taxed by
the Taxing Master and/or agreed between the parties; and
6.3
Should the payment of the taxed or agreed costs not be
effected timeously, the plaintiff will be entitled to interest at the
applicable
rate from the date of the allocator to the date of
payment.
7.
It is noted that there is a valid
Contingency Fee Agreement in place.
Case no: 52869/2019
1.
By agreement between the parties the
defendant is ordered to pay the Plaintiff a capital amount of
R4 795 234.00 (Four
Million Seven Hundred Ninety Five
Thousand Two Hundred Thirty Five Rand) as full and final settlement
into the following bank account:
ACCOUNT HOLDER: ET NKUNA ATTORNEYS
INCORPORATED; BANK NAME: NEDBANK, BRANCH NAME: BROOKLYN, BRANCH CODE:
16314500, ACCOUNT NO:
12[…], TYPE OF ACCOUNT : TRUST ACCOUNT.
2.
The above-mentioned capital is payable within the period of 180 days
from date
of settlement of this matter. In the event of the capital
not being paid within 180 days, mora interest will run at the
applicable
interest rate untill date of payment.
3.
The defendant is ordered to furnish the
plaintiff with an undertaking in terms of
Section 17(4)(a)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act, 56 of 1996
for the reasonable cost of the
future accommodation of the plaintiff in a hospital or nursing home
or treatment of or rendering
of a service to him or supplying of
goods to him resulting from the accident related injuries sustained
by the plaintiff and the
costs of administering and enforcement of
this undertaking, as a result of the motor vehicle collision which
occurred on the 04
th
December 2017.
4.
The defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s the taxed or
agreed party
and party costs of the action.
5.
The aforementioned taxed or agreed party and party costs, once
determined, must
also be paid to the Plaintiff’s Attorneys, ET
Nkuna Attorneys Inc. by direct transfer into their aforementioned
trust account
and in the event that such costs are not agreed the
plaintiff shall serve on the defendant’s Attorneys notice of
taxation
and the plaintiff shall allow the defendant fourteen (14)
ordinary days from the date of taxation/settlement of costs to make
such
payment. In the events of the cost not being paid within
14 days as aforesaid, interest will run at the applicable interest
rate till date of payment.
6.
The Contingency Fee Agreements between the plaintiff and his
attorneys are declared
invalid.
Case no: 70299/2018
1.
By agreement between the parties, it is declared that the
defendant is liable for 100% of the plaintiff’s damages
suffered
as a result of a motor vehicle collision which has occurred
on 26 January 2018.
2.
The defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff the amount of
R812 999.55 (Eight Hundred and Twelve Thousand, Nine Hundred and
Ninety
Nine Rand, Fifty Five Cents) in respect of past and future
loss of support within 180 days from the date of this order and as
full
and final settlement of this matter;
3.
The defendant will not be liable for interest on the capital
amount should same be paid before or on the date calculated in terms
of paragraph 2 supra failing which the defendant will be liable for
interest calculated at the applicable prescribed rate of interest
from time to time from date of judgment;
4.
The defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s taxed or
agreed party and party costs up to the date hereof.
5.
Payment of the capital amount as set out in paragraph 2 supra
hereof, shall be made into the following bank account: Bank: STANDARD
BANK, Account Holder: STRYDOM ING, Account Number: 01[…],
Account Type: TRUST Branch Code: 014845, Reference: 3071.
6.
The contingency fee agreement entered into between the
plaintiff and her attorneys is declared invalid.
Case
no: 54979/2018
1.
By agreement between the parties the
defendant is ordered to furnish the plaintiff with an undertaking in
terms of
section 17(4)
(a) of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
,
for the costs of future accommodation in a hospital or a nursing home
or treatment of or rendering of a service or supplying of
goods to
the plaintiff after such costs have been incurred and on proof
thereof, relating to the injuries sustained by the plaintiff
as a
result of a collision which occurred on 27 October 2017.
2.
By agreement the defendant is ordered to
pay the Plaintiff an amount of R 900 000.00 (Nine Hundred
Thousand Rands only) in
respect of general damages suffered by the
Plaintiff, payable within 180 days from the date of this acceptance
and such amount
to paid into the Plaintiff’s attorneys of
record trust account with the following details: ACCOUNT HOLDER:
BALOYI (T.S) &
MOROBE ATTORNEYS INC, BANK NAME: FNB,
ACCOUNT NO: 62[…], BRANCH NAME: PRETORIA, BRANCH CODE:
251445, REF’S
NUMBER: RAF[...]
3.
The defendant will not be liable for
interest on the above mentioned amount; save in the event of failing
to pay on the due date,
in which event the defendant will be liable
to pay interest on the outstanding amount at the prescribed rate of
interest from time
to time.
4.
The defendant is ordered to pay the taxed
or agreed party and party costs of the plaintiff in this action to
date hereof.
5.
The issues relating to the quantum of the
remainder of the plaintiff’s claims are postponed sine die.
6.
The contingency fee agreement between the
plaintiff and her attorney is declared invalid.
______________________
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date of Hearing: 22
February 2023
Judgment delivered: 12
June 2023
APPEARANCES:
Case
no: 57337/2020
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv L Schreuder
Attorney
for the Plaintiff:
Grosskopf Attorneys, Pretoria
For
the Defendant:
No appearance
Case
no: 52869/2019
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv T Maphelela
Attorney
for the Plaintiff:
E T Nkuna Attorneys, Inc., Pretoria
For
the Defendant:
No appearance
Case
no: 70299/2018
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv H Joubert & Adv W Coetzee
Attorney
for the Plaintiff:
Strydom Inc,
Pretoria
For
the Defendant:
No appearance
Case
no: 54979/2018
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv Motloung
Attorney
for the Plaintiff:
Baloyi (T.S) & Morobe Attorneys Inc.,
Pretoria
For
the Respondent:
No appearance
[1]
See:
Mkuyana
v RAF
[2020] 3 All SA 834
(ECG);
2020 (6) SA 405
(ECG) and (
Mkunyana
)
and the cases referred to therein.
[2]
Price
Waterhouse Coopers Inc v National Potato Co-op
2004
(6) SA 66
(SCA) (
PWC
)
at par 41.
[3]
PWC
above
and
Tecmed
(Pty) Ltd v Hunter and another
[2008] ZAGPHC 41
;
2008 (6) SA 210
(W), Davis “
The
limited purview of the
Contingency Fees Act
”
De
Rebus
,
March 2019, G van Niekerk, “
Door
closed on Common Law Contingency
”,
De
Rebus
,
April 2013.
[4]
Section
2(1)(a)
of the Act.
[5]
Section
2(2)
of the Act.
[6]
Thalo
v RAF
2011
(5) SA 446
(GSJ),
Masango
v RAF
(2012/21359)
[2016] ZAGPJHC 227 (31 August 2016) paras 19-25 and
Mkuyana
(above)
[7]
See
Tjatji
v RAF and two similar cases
2013 (2) SA 632
(GSJ) (
Tjatji
)
at paras 16-20,
DP
obo LD v RAF
(15/29274)
[2019] ZAGPJHC 334 (6 September 2019) and
Mkunyana
(above).
[8]
Tjatji
at
paras 24-25.
[9]
Tjatji
at
par 26 and
Rule
70
as well as
Theodosiou
and Others v Schindlers Attorneys
(14038/2021)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 9 (20 January 2022).
[10]
Section
3(3)
of the Act reads as follows:
(3)
A contingency fees agreement shall state-
(a)
the proceedings to which the agreement relates;
(b)
that, before the agreement was entered into, the client-
(i)
was advised of any other ways of financing the litigation and of
their respective implications
[11]
Section
4(1)
of the Act reads as follows:
4(1) Any offer of
settlement made to any party who has entered into a contingency fees
agreement, may be accepted after the legal
practitioner has files an
affidavit with the court, if the matter is before court, or has
files an affidavit with the professional
controlling body, if the
matter is not before court, stating-
(a)
The full terms of the settlement;
(b)
An estimate of the amount or other relief
that may be obtained by taking the matter to trial;
(c)
An estimate of the chances of success or
failure at trial;
(d)
An outline of the legal practitioner’s
fees if the matter is settled as compared to taking the matter to
trial;
(e)
The reasons why the settlement is
recommended;
(f)
That the matters contemplated in
paragraphs (a) to (e) were explained to the client, and the steps
taken to ensure that the client
understands the explanation; and
(g)
That the legal practitioner was informed by the
client that he or she understands and accepts the terms of the
settlement.
[12]
Section
4(2)
of the acts reads as follows:
4(2) The affidavit
referred to in subsection (1) must be accompanied by an affidavit by
the client, stating-
(a)
That he or she was notified in writing of
the terms of the settlement;
(b)
That the terms of the settlement were
explained to him or her, and that he r she understands and agrees to
them; and
(c)
His or her attitude to the settlement.
See also:
Mofokeng v
RAF and related matters
[2012] ZAGPJHC 150.
[13]
Mkunyana
at
[17].
[14]
It
therefore conforms to the “modern” principles of
interpretation of statutes espoused in
Natal
Joint Municipality Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) and
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
2014 (2) SA 494 (SCA).
[15]
Code of
Conduct for all Legal Practitioners, Candidate Legal Practitioners
and Juristic Entities,
LPC Notice 198 of 2019, Clause 3.10: “
Legal
practitioners shall … advise their clients at the earliest
possible opportunity on the likely success of such clients
case and
not generate unnecessary work nor involve their clients in
unnecessary expense
”.
[16]
PWC
at
42.
[17]
Mkunyana
at
par 14 and
Erasmus
v Williams
2016 JDR 2007 (ECG 3364/2016, 8 December 2016) at para 13.
[18]
Tjatji
at
par 16.
[19]
See
Tjatji
at paras 19 - 20
[20]
See
Tjatji
at
par 21 and see also
SAAPIL
v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development (RAF,
Intervention party)
2013 (2) SA 583 (GNP).
[21]
See
PWC
at par 50.
[22]
See
Tjatji
at par 23.
[23]
See
for example
Tjatji
at 14 and the CFAs dealt with in that judgment.
[24]
Mbethe
v RAF and eight similar matter
(856/2020)
[2023] ZAMPMBHC 5 (26 January 2023).
[25]
See
for example
Mkunyana
at par 18.
[26]
See
inter alia
Hastings
v The Taxing Master
1962 (3) SA 789
(N) and
City
of Cape Town v Arun Property Development (Pty) Ltd
2009 (5) SA 227 (C).
[27]
Bowman
v Avraanides
1991
(10 SA 92
(w) and
NUS
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v R & F Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2000 (3) SA 522 (E).
[28]
Francis-Subbiah,
Taxation
of Legal Costs in South Africa
,
1
st
Ed (Francis-Subbiah) at 22.9. and
Kohne
and National Insurance Ltd
1968 (2) 499 (N) at 500.
[29]
Cilliers,
The
Law of Costs
,
Butterworths, at 13.3, Francis-Subbiah at 22.9.1 and
The
Government v The Oceana Consolidated Co
1908TS43.
[30]
Stevens
v Provincial Insurance Co Ltd
1966
(3) SA 62
(N).
[31]
Muller
v AA Mutual Insurance Association Ltd and Another
(
Muller
)
1973 (2) SA 787
(TPD), in particular 789A.
[32]
Muller
at
789 B-C.
[33]
Donaldson
v Seaward
1958
(2) SA 198
(0).
sino noindex
make_database footer start