Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 131South Africa
South African Legal Practice Council v Ntsie (52311/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 131 (8 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## South African Legal Practice Council v Ntsie (52311/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 131 (8 March 2022)
South African Legal Practice Council v Ntsie (52311/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 131 (8 March 2022)
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sino date 8 March 2022
IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE NUMBER: 52311/19
In
the matter between:
SOUTH
AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
APPLICANT
And
THABISO
JEREMIAH
NTSIE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
TLHAPI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1] The
respondent was admitted as an attorney on 9 December 2005 and as a
conveyancer on 27
October 2006. He is a single practitioner,
practicing of his own account under the style as TJ Ntsie Attorneys
in Pretoria, Gauteng.
The applicant is
custus
morum
of all legal practitioners, including the respondent. The applicant
also exercises disciplinary jurisdiction over all legal practitioners
in respect of conduct which is allegedly unprofessional,
dishonourable and unworthy of the profession. The applicant now
brings
this application before the court in terms of section 44(1) of
the Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014, (LPA), for a determination as
to
whether the respondent was a fit and proper person to continue to
practice as an attorney and for the striking of the respondent
from
the roll of attorneys of the above court. Legal Practitioners who
conduct practices as attorneys, conveyancers, notaries and
advocate
are expected to observe and comply with the LPA, the LPA Rules and
Code of Conduct.
[2] The
LPA came into effect on 1 November 2018. Section 116 (2) of the LPA
provides that any
proceedings in respect of the suspension of a legal
practitioner from practice ‘which proceedings were instituted
in terms
of any law repealed by the LPA and which were not concluded
at commencement date of the LPA must be continued and concluded as if
that law had not been repealed.’
[3] The
application was opposed. At a previous hearing the parties were
granted leave to file
further answering and replying supplementary
affidavits by order of Fourie J and Toni AJ of 28 August 2020 and
important was paragraph
5 of that order which read:
“
Pending
finalisation of the main application the respondent shall be
suspended from practicing as a legal practitioner (attorney
and/or
conveyancer). The further order attached hereto and marked” X”
shall apply in its entirety to the respondent
and his interim
suspension pending finalisation of the main application.”
[4] The
hearing did not proceed on 22 April 2021 and the respondent was
granted leave to file
s supplementary affidavit. The respondent filed
his affidavit out of time and failed to apply for condonation. A
notice of
set down was served at the offices of the respondent’s
attorneys of record Leso Attorneys on 25 May 2021 which also
stipulated
that the parties file heads of argument on particular
dates, the applicant on 13 January 2022 and the respondent on 20
January
2022.
The
applicant’s heads of argument were served via email on the
respondent’s attorneys on 2 December 2021. The respondent
failed to file his heads of argument. Having read the papers a
directive was issued that the matter would be decided on paper.
THE
FACTS
[5] There
were a plethora of complaints against the respondent as set out in
the founding and
supplementary affidavits. The nature of these
complaints were stated in paragraph 5 of the founding affidavit and
these included
those addressed in the investigation reports. What I
also found helpful was a schedule of contraventions pertaining to
complaints
lodged by the respondent’s clients from the year
2015 to 2019, and correspondence. The schedule is annexed to the
applicant’s
heads of argument. The schedule shall form part of
this judgment as annexure ‘A’
[1]
as filed on case lines 024 -46 to 024-57. I take cognizance of the
content of the all the complaints against the respondent as
addressed
in the founding affidavit and mention that these were not addressed
in the answering affidavit. As a result, I shall
not mention the
complaints individually. A supplementary answering affidavit
was filed by the respondent and only the facts
of those complaints
addressed by him are summarised.
COMPLAINTS
SCHEDULE
No.
Date
of Complaint
Complainant
Brief
Description
Reference
1.
10/02/2015
J
B Hugo &
Cronje
Incorporated
obo
SSP
& I
Mokwena
The
Mokwenas were purchasers of an immovable property. On 12/08/2014
the respondent confirmed instructions to effect transfer.
Respondent not responding to enquiries regarding progress of
transfer.
002-89
to 002-
92,
par 6 (inspection report) and 002103 to 002104(complaint)
2.
15/04/2015
E
P Mtshweni
Mtshweni
was the purchaser of an immovable property.
Mtshweni
deposited R110,000.00 on trust.
Respondent
paid funds to seller and the property was not transferred.
Respondent says that when he was to effect transfer
the property
was already sold to somebody else.
Ledger
account reflects the immediate transfer of funds to seller and
debiting of fees. Respondent breached client’s
trust,
negligent in handling of trust monies, has a trust deficit.
002-92
to 002-
95,
par 7 (inspection report) and 002-
105
to 002-117
(complaint)
3.
21/01/2015
S
D Mohapi
Mohapi
was the purchaser of an immovable property. R475,000.00 (purchase
price) plus R12,773.00 (transfer costs) paid onto
trust. No
progress being made and respondent not returning telephone calls.
From
trust bank statement:
Respondent
has drawn more
funds
from this trust creditor than available.
From
ledger account:
No
proper narrations of entries. Funds withdrawn prior registration
of transfer. Respondent did not provide proof of payments.
Ledger
doesn’t illustrate all transactions.
Trust
deficit, failure to account, inappropriate withdrawal of funds.
002-95
to 002- 99, par 8 (inspection report) and 002-
118
to 002-137
(complaint)
4.
13/11/2013
N
S Radebe
Radebe
sold property for R250,000.00. Respondent made several piecemeal
payments to client but has not accounted to client,
nor for
balance of funds, R30,010.00.
002-153,
par 5 (inspection report) and 002-
184
to 002-185
(complaint)
5.
11/03/2014
T
J Mabaso
Mabaso
purchaser of property.
Transferred
purchase price (R350,000.00) and transfer costs (R9,498.00) to
respondent between
11/10/2013
to 21/10/2013. Respondent not attending to instruction.
002-153,
par 6 (inspection report) and 002186 to 002-200
(complaint).
6.
Undated
T
P Nnzeru
Nnzeru
was the seller of a property. Respondent to register transfer.
Respondent failing to execute instructions, not providing
feedback, not account after early termination of mandate, not
handover file and did not refund funds paid to him.
002-155,
par 7 (inspection report) and 002201 to 002-208
(complaint).
7.
19/05/2016
J
M Motloung
Motloung
was the purchaser of an immovable property.
Respondent
to register transfer. R20,000.00 deposited on trust for
respondent’s fees. Respondent not effecting transfer
and not
answering calls. Respondent indicates that property is stuck in an
estate.
The
respondent did not open a trust ledger for Motloung and Swart
unable to find trust deposit in records. Swart unable to
find
trust deposit in records.
002-157
to 002-
159,
par 8 (inspection report) and 002-
210
to 002-214
(complaint)
8.
16/07/2016
Lebala
Moloi
Attorneys
obo
Executor
E/L
Mathonsi.
Respondent
instructed to transfer the immovable property out of the estate in
2011. All fees paid but the respondent is not
effecting transfer,
not responding to correspondence.
002-159
to 002-
160,
par 9 (inspection report) and 002-
215
to 002-223
(complaint)
9.
14/09/2016
M
Z Gcwensa
Gcwensa
purchased an immovable property. Respondent to attend to
registration of transfer.
R450,000
(purchase price) plus R15,000.00 (transfer costs) deposited on
trust on 04/03/2016. Respondent not effecting transfer,
not
responding to correspondence until threatened with Law Society and
made no further progress thereafter. Respondent transferred
property on 30/01/2017.
From
bank statements and
ledger
accounts:
1.
Respondent utilised funds to effect payments not associated with
transfer i.e to Estate Mogano and to
Maluleke
transaction.
2.
Maluleke transaction recorded in respondent’s ledger account
as “client payment”.
Respondent
rolling trust funds and accounting records are unreliable.
002-161
to 002-
164,
par 10 (inspection report) and 002224 to 002-232
(complaint),
002-233
to 002236 (ledger account and bank statements)
10.
17/02/2017
N
Langa
Langa
deposit R300,000.00 onto the respondent’s trust account on
22/03/2016 towards purchase of a property. Transaction
failed
(seller not owner of property). Respondent has failed to refund
trust deposit and respond to communications.
From
ledger account and bank
statements:
1.
Receipt
of funds captured in incorrect ledger account
(E/L
Langa / Madiba / Zondo).
Funds
utilised for fees, client payments, and as part of a large payment
to
Maila.
2.
Records reflect
accounting
record
manipulation,
rolling
trust funds,
trust
deficit and
that
accounting
records
cannot be
relied
upon.
002-164
to 002-
167,
par 11 (inspection report), 002-237 to 002-257
(complaint),
002-
258
to 002-261 (bank statements and ledger account)
11.
07/05/2015
SLS
Moeng
R164,225.21
paid into the respondent’s trust bank account n 23/12/2014
from sale of a property. The respondent is not
accounting for our
paying over the funds.
**Note:
Swart could not locate the funds in cashbook and ledger account.
The records perused by Swart were, however, for the
incorrect
financial period.
002-167
to 002-
168,
par 12 (inspection report) and 002-
262
to 002-270
(complaint)
12.
31/10/2017
B
L Madiba
Executor
in E/L E N Langa authorised payment to Madiba on 18/07/2016,
R20,000.00, from estate funds held in trust. Respondent
refused to
effect payment and wanted to deduct
R5,000.00
from payment.
From
ledger account:
The
ledger account reflects that the respondent did not have
sufficient funds available in trust from June 2016.
**Same
ledger account referred to in complaint no. 10, above.
002-168
to 002-
169,
par 13 (inspection report), 002-272 to 002-278
(complaint),
and 002-279 (ledger account).
13.
25/11/2017
J
Pascoal
Respondent
attended to the transfer of an immovable property for Pascoal.
Municipality
issued rates and taxes rebate to Pascoal. The rebate cheque was
drawn in the respondent’s name. Pascoal
delivered the cheque
to the respondent personally and in the four months that followed
the respondent failed to pay the refund
to Pascoal.
Swart
was unable to find a Pascoal ledger account nor a deposit for the
rates and taxes in the respondent’s accounting
records.
Further indication of unreliability of records.
002-169
to 002-
170,
par 14 (inspection report) and 002-
280
to 002-284
(complaint)
14.
04/06/2018
K
Hlatshwayo
Hlatshwayo
sold an immovable property for R250,000.00. The respondent’s
fees amounted to
R11,000.00.
From the proceeds of the sale, the respondent paid over an amount
of R182,000.00. The balance of R57,000.00 is
unaccounted for.
002-170
to 002-
171,
par 15 (inspection report) and 002- 285 to 002-289
(complaint)
15.
20/02/2018
Samsodien
Attorneys
obo
Sekwaila
Sekwaila
was the purchaser of an immovable property. Deposited R260,000.00
on the respondent’s trust account to this
end on 06/12/2016.
Respondent not effected transfer and not accounted for funds.
From
ledger and bank
statements:
1.
Funds
used for payments to Hamn and Pascoal (within two months of
receipt).
2.
Accounting
records reflect payments to Hamn and Pascoal as “client
payment”.
Respondent
rolling trust funds and accounting records inaccurate.
002-172
to 002-
175,
par 16 (inspection report), 002-290 to 002-299
(complaint),
and
002-301
to 002303 (bank statements and ledger account)
16.
28/05/2018
(complaint) and
20/09/2019
(fidelity
fund claim)
C
J Muller
Between
16/03/2017 and 06/08/2017, Nzama deposited R236,353.00 on trust
towards purchase of property and transfer costs. The
respondent
did not transfer the property and has not accounted for funds
deposited on trust.
**Plethora
of correspondence addressed by various attorneys and complainants
to respondent with no response.
On
20/09/2019 Nzama lodged
claim
against attorneys’ fidelity fund based on the
misappropriation of his trust funds by the respondent.
002-304
to 002- 376 (complaint) and 008-29 to 008-53 (fidelity fund
claim).
(Correspondence
at 002-314 to
002-376).
17.
19/02/2018
M
S Mnisi
In
February 2016, R199,000.00 deposited on the respondent’s
trust bank account for the purchase of an immovable property
and
for the transfer costs. The respondent has failed to effect
transfer of the property.
002-377
to 002-
382
(complaint).
18.
12/02/2018
N
M Masango
R190,000.00
deposited into the respondent’s trust bank account on
31/10/2016 for the purchase of an immovable property.
The
respondent failed to transfer the property and was not responding
to the client’s telephone calls.
002-383
to 002-
387
(complaint)
19.
26/10/2018
R
V Mooka
Mooka
was the purchaser of an immovable property.
R278,000.00
was deposited on the respondent’s trust account towards the
purchase price and the respondent’s fees.
The respondent
paid R120,000.00 to the seller, has failed to pay over the
balance, and has failed to effect transfer.
002-388
to 002-
392
(complaint)
20.
26/10/2018
P
T Makhuvele
R170,000.00
deposited on the respondent’s trust bank account in 2014
towards the purchase of an immovable property.
The sale could not
proceed and Makhuvele wants the funds returned.
002-393
to 002-
397
(complaint).
21.
02/07/2019
R
G Modjadji
R519,562.00
deposited onto the respondent’s trust bank account for the
purchase of an immovable property and the transfer
costs. The
property has not been transferred, the respondent is not
providing updates in this regard, whereabouts of
funds unknown.
007-15
to 007-31
(complaint)
22.
11/06/2019
M
E Tswele
On
18/09/2018 the respondent was paid R3,000.00 to effect amendments
to a title deed. The respondent did not attend to the
instruction
and did not honour subsequent undertakings to do so.
007-32
to 007-43 (complaint).
23.
29/05/2019
B
R Magagula
On
18/03/2016 the respondent was paid R10,000.00 to transfer an
immovable property into the name of Magagula that she had
inherited from her late mother. The respondent did not attend to
instruction and did not honour subsequent undertakings to
do so.
007-44
to 007-49 (complaint).
24.
21/06/2019
M
S Lesenyego
Between
24/08/2017 and
13/09/2018
a total amount of R8,500.00 was paid onto the respondent’s
trust account for the respondent to transfer an
immovable property
into the complainant’s name. The respondent failed to do so
and did not respond to communication.
007-50
to 007-78 (complaint).
25.
26/06/2019
M
T Mphahlele
R260,000.00
was due to Mphahlele from the proceeds of the sale of an immovable
property. The respondent (after much hassle)
only paid R200,000.00
to Mphahlele and has failed to account for the balance. Delayed
payment of trust funds, failure to
account for trust funds,
probably misappropriation.
007-79
to 007-81
(complaint)
[6] This
application was preceded by an investigation conducted by an internal
auditor and chartered
accountant Ms Mapfumo (Kaserera). It was
prompted as a result of complaints received by the applicant (the
then Law Society)
and from the non-compliance by the respondent with
the LPA, LPA Rules and Code of Conduct. The terms of reference
entailed a wide
investigation into the accounting records of the
practice, the individual complaints and an account of engagement with
the respondent
through correspondence. The attempts to arrange
consultations with the respondent and with his bookkeeper failed
because, despite
request, they did not make themselves available to
discuss the report. However, the respondent’s trust account
records were
furnished by his external bookkeeper via email and were
recorded on a Pastel Accounting System, with the accounting records
written
up to 30 April 2015 and with the trust account reflecting a
balance of R1 544 997.63. Ms Kaserera’s report was
prepared in 2015. Further complaints necessitated another
investigation which was conducted by Mr Swart (chartered accountant)
during 2018. He also considered Kaserera’s report after she had
left the employment of the applicant.
[7] The
respondent indicated that did not have receipt books. The clients
deposited monies
direct into his trust account. His contraventions
are listed below. Ms Kaserera also prepared a report which is annexed
to the
founding papers and is referred to where applicable in the
founding affidavit:
7.1 practised
without a fidelity fund certificate commencing 1 January
2019;(sections
84(1) .85(1) and 93 (8) of the LPA)
7.2
there were trust deficits in the respondent’s
bookkeeping; (Rule 69.3.2
7.3
failure to report such trust deficits to the
applicant;
7.4 the
current and true trust position could not be established; and failure
to record trust position correctly
and accurately; trust creditors
accounts reflected debit balances; (Rule 68.1; Rule 68(2)
7.5 the
excessive transfers from the trust account into the business banking
account and the transfer of
rounded amounts into the business banking
account from the trust account;
7.6 irregular
withdrawals from the trust account which was held at Standard Bank,
Pretoria Branch; (Rule
69.5)
7.7 appropriating
fees prior to registration of transfers of immovable property;
7.8
mismanagement of trust funds;
7.9
incomplete narration of transactions in
ledger accounts;
7.10 delayed
payment of trust funds to clients and failure to properly account to
clients; (Rule 54.12, 54.13,
68.7, 68.8)
7.11 contravention
of several provisions of the LPA, LPA Rules and Code of Conduct
7.12 Failure
to cooperate with the Council and its inspectors when seeking to
conduct an inspection of the respondent’s
accounting records.
(Rule 89.25)
7.13
Failure to distinguish between trust account and business
account
[8] The
applicant contended that according to the reports the respondent was
not involved in
the preparation and review of his accounting records;
and that as a result of the complaints and non-compliance with the
applicant’s
requirements placed his trust creditors and the
Fidelity Fund at risk
[9] In
the supplementary founding affidavit the applicant dealt with the
complaints of
Ms M G Malamula submitted to applicant on 3 October
2019 and that of M CJ Muller obo Ms SGL Nzama submitted to applicant
on 28
May 2018.
Complaint,
Ms NG Malamula: The complainant sold her immovable property in
Mamelodi Gardens to a certain Mr Zwane for an amount of
R650 000.00
and respondent attended to the transfer. An amount of R507 840.54
was allegedly owed to the City of Tshwane
which was disputed by the
complainant. Instructions were given to the respondent to negotiate a
reduction and to pay the amount
owing. The complainant was given
R210 000.00 from the proceeds of the sale. The complainant
alleged that the respondent failed
to pay the balance to City of
Tshwane. The respondent with the assistance of an employee of City of
Tshwane misappropriated the
balance in the amount of R440 000.00.
The respondent failed to return the complainant’s calls.
*Complaint,
CJ Muller obo Ms SGL Nzama: C J Muller lodged a claim with the Legal
Practitioners
Fidelity Fund on behalf of Ms Nzama. She had paid an amount of
R236 353.00
towards purchase of the immovable property and transfer costs. The
respondent
failed to attend to the transfer, the bond was not approved as a
result of
the
delay occasioned by the respondent. He retained the money and failed
or
refused
to repay it.
[10]
In answer the respondent raised a number of
Points
in Limine
:
10.1
Misjoinder: - The applicant failed in terms of Rule 10(3) or the
common law to join the practice of the respondent
as part of the
proceedings
10.2 Review
in terms of PAJA: - That the resolution by the applicant to launch
the application was reviewable in terms
of sections 6(2)(b) and /or
6(2)(c) and/or 6(2) €(iii), (iv) and (vi) and /or 6(2)(f)(I) and
/or 6(2)(1) of the Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
(PAJA), and on grounds that the decision was unlawful, unreasonable,
procedurally unfair
and irrational.
10.3 Right of
access to the financial records of the practice: - That the main
opposition to the application was that
the applicant had no right
under the Act to demand access to the books of the respondent; or
that he be obliged to furnish records
to the Registrar. He contends
that such right is not one contemplated in the Act, and he denies the
applicant such access. It is
contended that the applicant can only
obtain the record in terms of the Promotion of Access to Information
Act 2 of 2000 (PAIA).
[11] The
respondent contends that regardless of the findings of Ms Kaserera
there was a balance of
R 1 544 997.63 as at 30 April 2015
available in the trust account, and that the list of trust creditors
and the balance
in the trust account did not reflect any deficit.
Further, Ms Kaserera’s report was never adopted or considered
by the applicant
or provided to the respondent to consider and
deliberate upon until six years later, and that the lapse of time was
prejudicial
to him and made it impossible to send it to his own
accountant for consideration and advise.
[12] The
respondent contended that the applicant failed to demonstrate that
there was any harm or even
threat to the complainants, further that
the records as confirmed by the applicant’s accountants and
relied upon by the applicant
were scientifically incorrect. The
respondent denies every allegation inconsistent to what is in his
answering affidavit and applies
for the application be reviewed and
set aside and application be struck off the roll.
[13] The
respondent denied any misappropriation of funds with regard to Ms
Malumela’s complaint.
He contended that as the transferring
attorney he was not approached by the applicant to give his version.
He paid a sum of R210 000.00
which was more than what she was
entitled to. The outstanding unresolved bill with the City of Tshwane
did not fall within the
ambit of his instructions and he cannot be
blamed for what seems to be an accusation that he failed to negotiate
a reduction of
what she owed to the City of Tshwane. In reply the
applicant contended that the respondent has not given any explanation
or give
details or provide any records of how the balance of the
proceeds in the amount of R440 000.00 was dealt with by him
[14] The
respondent denied that he misappropriated funds relating to the Ms
Nzama complaint. The property
was being purchased from a couple who
were going through a divorce and the delay in finalizing the
transaction was not occasioned
by him, but by ongoing talks between
the couple and Tim Durant Attorneys who had instructions to
foreclose. He advised Ms
Nzama to await resolution of the
problem but she insisted on occupying the property having made
arrangements with the agents. Ms
Nzama gave instructions to the
respondent to pay an amount of R39 000.00 on the outstanding
electricity bill. Ms Nzama complained
of a damaged ceiling, the
agents obtained a quotation, the ceiling and gate were repaired for
an amount of R5000.00 and he was
given instructions to pay.
[15] While
dealing with Tim Durant Ms Nzama through the same agents went and
purchased another property.
He had already given Tim Durant a
guarantee before the sale was cancelled. There was also the issue on
the couple’s demand
for occupational rent from the remainder of
the funds held on behalf of Nzama which monies are still held in
trust and were not
misappropriated.
[16] There
was a demand to him to close the file and to pay over all monies to
the attorneys Ms Nzama
had instructed. The attorneys were unwilling
to resolve the issue. The respondent contends that Ms Nzama was kept
abreast of developments.
According to the respondent he was never
called by the applicant to give his version or called to an enquiry.
In reply the applicant
contended that the respondent’s
explanation was not convincing. He had failed to present his complete
accounting records,
all supporting source documents and proof that
the monies were still held in trust.
THE
ISSUES
[17] The
issues are:
(a)
whether the
points
in
limine
raised
have merit;
(b)
whether the
respondent is a fit and proper person to continue to practice as
an
attorney
THE
LAW
Points
in
limine
[18] The
contention by the respondent that the applicant had not made out a
case for access to his accounting
records in terms of PAIA, in my
view, is a display of a complete ignorance of the role the applicant
plays as
custus
mores
of
the profession, and in the interest of the public; of the provisions
of the Act, the Code of Conduct, and the Rules pertaining
to the
keeping of an attorney’s books of account. The applicant had
been in practice for 15 years till his suspension in
2020. I do not
find it necessary to refer to the particular rules at this stage,
save to state that the respondent had knowledge
that an attorney’s
books, in particular his trust account is subject to audit every
year, that a clean audit report should
precede the issue of a
fidelity fund certificate, which is also valid for only a year. The
audit report is filed with the applicant
by an auditor who is
appointed by the attorney and not the applicant. Therefore, I
consider this point to be a mockery of the processes
in place, if a
practitioner suggests that an investigation into his books be
subjected to a PAIA application first, knowing full
well that the
trust account and all monies in such account belongs to his clients,
and that he is only entitled to a fee from such
monies properly
accounted for. This point is dismissed.
[19] In
my view, having regard to the nature of the proceedings before this
court as dealt with below,
the resolution which the applicant seeks
to review, is a necessary preliminary step towards launching the
disciplinary procedure,
to be adjudicated by the court in terms of
section 44(1) of the Act. The resolution in itself does not directly
affect the respondent
in that it does not pronounce on the conduct
and the ultimate sanctions to be given. Therefore, in my view the
application in terms
of PAJA at this preliminary stage is
misconceived, alternatively should it be possible for these
sui
generis
procedure
to be reviewed, the application is at this stage pre-mature. This
point is dismissed.
[20] It
is not necessary to cite the respondent’s practice because it
is not a separate juristic
person and the respondent is a sole
practitioner. This point is dismissed.
[21] The
respondent has not pleaded that the lapse of time from preparation of
Ms Kaserera’s report
made it impossible for his expert to
consider the said report. Further, the respondent had not pleaded
that the records were no
longer available because the matters of his
clients were finalized or mandate withdrawn and five or seven years
had passed being
the period he was obliged to keep such records. I
mention 5 of 7 years because in the Rules under the old Act 5 years
was provided
for and the present Rules provide for 7 years. In my
view, it is not the lapse of time that is important, but the
availability
of the records which should have been in the custody of
the respondent, and which he should have been availed to his expert
to
consider. If the applicant had taken possession of such
records, then access to such records should have been requested. This
point too should be dismissed.
The
present enquiry
[22] A
broad outline of some excerpts from the preamble of the
Legal
Practice Act 28 of 2014
state the aim and purpose of the Act as
follows:
“
WHEREAS
section 22 of the Bill of Rights of
the Constitution establishes the right to freedom of trade,
occupation and profession, and provides
that the practice of a trade,
occupation or profession may be regulated by law:
“
AND BEARING IN MIND THAT-
*access
to legal services is not a reality for most South Africans;
AND
IN ORDER TO-
*ensure
that the values underpinning the Constitution are embraced and that
the rule
of
law is upheld;
*ensure
that legal services are accessible;
*
regulate
the legal professions in the public interest, by means of a single
statute
*ensure
accountability of the legal profession to the public
(my
emphasis)
[23] Section
36 of the Act provides for the development of a code of conduct which
legal practitioners
must
adhere to,
and
obliges the applicant to publish such code of conduct. Where
complaints have been received by the applicant against legal
practitioners,
Section 37 of the Act provides for the institution of
an investigation by a committee or a disciplinary procedure by a
disciplinary
committee (section 39(1) of the Act). which includes a
disciplinary procedure by the high courts launched by the applicant
(sections
40(3) and 44(1) of the Act),
the
latter being the final determinant on the striking of a legal
practitioner on a finding, having heard evidence that such a legal
practitioner is not a fit and proper person to continue to practice
as a legal practitioner.
The
investigation envisaged in section 37 of the Act would entail an
examination of any book, document, article, related to the
complaint
which is in the possession of the legal practitioner and in terms of
37(1)(h) the legal practitioner “may not,
subject to the
provision of any other law, refuse to produce the book, document or
article, even though he or she is of the opinion
that it contains
confidential information belonging to or concerning his or her
client.” (my emphasis)
The
provisions in the Act, Rules and Code of Conduct which the respondent
contravened:
[24] Section
87 of the Act requires proper accounting records to be kept in
respect of a trust account,
recording of monies received and paid out
on behalf of a client; this includes monies invested on behalf of
clients and interest
paid on such investments. The Rules 54.6
prescribes the format in which these records should be presented and
examples are: (i)
Records containing entries from day to day of all
monies received and paid by it, (ii) Records containing particulars
and information.
Rule 54.12 and 54.13 provides for proper accounting
on what is due to a client and that monies be paid within a
reasonable time
after mandate has been performed or termination
thereof. Rule 54. 14 provides for when withdrawals from the trust
account may be
made, which is to a trust creditor and into the
business account of the firm. The latter transfer may only occur in
respect of
what is due to the practice. The Rule also provides for
when disbursements may be paid out of the business account. Section
84(1)
enjoins every attorney practising for his own account to be in
possession of a Fidelity Fund Certificate valid from 1 January to
31
December. The provision is peremptory and an attorney who contravenes
this provision renders himself liable to a fine or imprisonment.
[25] The
nature of the enquiry before the court was aptly described by Brand
JA in
Summerly V Law Society; Northen Provinces
2006 (5) SA
613
{SCA)
“
It
has now become settled law that the application of s22 (1)(d)
involves a threefold enquiry (see e.g. Jassat v Natal Law Society
2003 (3) SA 44 (SCA) in para10 at 51C1-1, and Law Society of the Cape
of Good Hope 2003 v Budricks (2) SA 11 (SCA) in para [2]
at 131-14B.
The first enquiry is aimed at determining whether the Law Society has
established the offending conduct upon which
it relies. on a balance
of probabilities. The second question is whether in the light of the
misconduct thus established, the attorney
concerned is not a fit and
proper person to continue to practice as an attorney’. Although
this has not always been the position,
s22(1)(d) now expressly
provides that the determination of the second issue requires an
exercise of it discretion by the court
(see e.g. A v Law Society of
the Cape of Good Hope
1989 (1) SA 849
(A) at 851 (C-E). As was
pointed out by Scott JA at (51E-F), the third enquiry again requires
the Court to exercise discretion.
At this stage the court must
decide. In the exercise of its discretion, whether the person who has
been found not to be a fit and
proper person to practice as an
attorney deserves the ultimate penalty of being struck from the roll
or whether an order of suspension
from practice will suffice
[26] In
Hepple
and two others and the Law Society of the Northern Provinces
(507/2013
[2014] ZASCA 75
(29 May 2014) Mthiyane DP states at [9]”
“
In
considering whether a case has been made out against an attorney
sought to be struck from the roll it is necessary to bear in
mind
that their evidence presented by the law society is not to be treated
as though one is dealing with a ‘criminal case”
or “”an
ordinary civil case. The proceedings in applications to strike the
names of attorneys from the roll are not
ordinary civil proceedings.
They are proceedings of a disciplinary nature and are
sui
generis
.: It follows that
where allegations and evidence are presented against an attorney they
cannot be met with mere denials by the
attorney concerned. If
allegations are made by the law society and underlying documents are
provided which form the basis of the
allegation, they cannot be
simply brushed aside; the attorneys are expected to respond
meaningfully to them and to furnish a proper
explanation of the
financial discrepancies as their failure to do so may count against
them. In this regard the remarks of Harms
ADP in Malan v Law Society
of the Northern Provinces
[2008] ZASCA 90
2009 (1) 216 (SCA) para
27-28
“
If
one turns to bookkeeping charges, the position is simply that there
is no allegation of a realisation of the seriousness of the
offences.
They are brushed off on the basis that the society failed to prove a
trust shortage that the bookkeeper had erred, that
they did not know
the rules, that their auditors had erred or simply by not dealing
with the pertinent allegations. Furthermore,
instead of dealing with
the merits of the allegations, the appellants conducted a paper war
and they attacked the Society and its
officers, they attacked the
Fidelity Fund and they attack the attorneys who had to take over the
files – in short, their
approach on paper was obstructionist.
These factors are aggravating and not extenuating because they
manifest character defects,
a lack of integrity, a lack of judgement
and a lack of insight.”
[27] The
respondent has only attempted to deal with two of the complaints
levelled against him and,
the rest as stated in annexure ‘A’
and some additional offences based on the Act, Code of Conduct and
the Rules remain
unanswered. It is my view that the contention by the
respondent that the applicant failed to give him opportunity to
address the
complaints with him personally, by way of an enquiry
before the applicant, should not be given as an excuse for not
dealing with
them because, in these proceedings the respondent is
given yet another opportunity to address the said complaint. This is
so because
the court is not only confined to pronouncing on the
transgressions of the Act, the Rules and Code of Conduct, the court,
depending
on the gravity of the offences is also required to exercise
a discretion whether to suspend or to strike the respondent from the
roll of practising attorneys. It is common cause that the respondent
is presently suspended, so he has to give reasons why the
court
should not strike him from the roll. What the court is faced
with are bare denials, where the respondent has not defended
with any
particularity the complaints against him.
[28] The
respondent did not have receipt books and clients had to deposit
direct into the trust bank account.
The investigation found that the
balances in the trust ledger did not mirror the balances in the trust
bank account. The respondent
and his bookkeeper declined or did not
honour an invitation by Ms Kaserera to discuss the discrepancies in
the accounting records.
A credit balance in the trust account on any
given day does not necessarily manifest the absence of a trust
deficit.
[29] I
find that the defences given to the complaints of CJ Muller and
Malamula cannot be considered without
the respondent providing
evidence in support of his explanations. Such evidence can only be
found in the client files and books
of account.
[30] The
complaint of CJ Muller has already been referred to the Fidelity
Fund. If certain transactions
were done on the instructions of Ms
Nzama then the respondent should have been in a position to furnish
such information. He contends
that the client file was in the
possession of the applicant, this should not have precluded him from
gaining access to the file
on request to the applicant. Further,
whatever motivation he had for making payments on behalf of Ms Nzama
for other issues unrelated
to the transfer for example alleged
payment of the R39 000.00, in my view, constituted a breach of
his duty to make payments
only related to the real mandate being
transfer of property. Further, if indeed the client file was with the
applicant my question
is, what is the source of his explanation in
his answering affidavit, he has not annexed any document.
[31] With
regard to the Malamula, if only R210 000.00 was paid to the
complainant, the respondent
has not explained how the R440 000.00
was utilized where, according to his version he had no instructions
to settle the municipality
bill.
[32] As
seen from the schedule attached and aside from the complaints from
clients, or the failure
to comply with the Act and Rules, most of the
contraventions emanate from the investigations into the books of the
practice that
was conducted by Ms Kaserera and Mr Swart. They have to
deal with the keeping of the books of account in an attorney’s
practice,
the recording of transactions in the trust accounts, the
recording of transactions in the trust ledgers, the cash book, the
lack
of source documents to justify certain transactions and debiting
fees prematurely and without justification; and the responsibility
to
account to clients; appropriating monies from the trust account
[33] A
legal practitioner remains fully accountable to the applicant for
compliance with the Act and should
be able at short notice to avail
accounting records when requested to do so by the inspectorate
appointed by the applicant as happened
in this instance. The
respondent is obliged by law to give his full co-operation when such
investigation is conducted. He has failed,
as already mentioned to
respond to the findings of the investigation. In my view, the
unreasonable challenge to the authority vested
in the applicant by
the Act, the respondent’s refusal to deal with the twenty-eight
contraventions among others, complained
about as also appears in the
schedule, especially those dealing with the management of the books
relating to the trust account
is a serious dereliction of his
constitutional duty to ensure the protection of funds entrusted to
him by members of the public.
Such conduct amounts to
dishonesty and I find that the respondent is not a fit and proper
person to be allowed to practice
as an attorney and that he be struck
off the roll of practicing attorneys.
[34] In
the result the following order is granted:
1.
The
respondent Thabiso Jeremiah Ntsie be struck from the roll of
attorneys
(legal
Practitioners);
2.
Paragraphs
3 to 12 of Annexure X to the order of 28 August 2020 shall
remain
in force;
3.
The
respondent is to pay costs on the application on an attorney and
client
scale.
______________________
TLHAPI
V V
(JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT)
I
agree
___________________
BOKAKO
T
(ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT)
[1]
COMPLAINTS
SCHEDULE (Annexure ‘A’)
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