Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 568South Africa
Mohalalelo v John Tsietsi Aphiri t/a Aprhiri Attorneys (67331/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 568 (27 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
27 July 2022
Judgment
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
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPPHC 568
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mohalalelo v John Tsietsi Aphiri t/a Aprhiri Attorneys (67331/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 568 (27 July 2022)
Mohalalelo v John Tsietsi Aphiri t/a Aprhiri Attorneys (67331/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 568 (27 July 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2022_568.html
sino date 27 July 2022
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO
: 67331-2018
DATE
:
2022-06-08
REPORTABLE:
YES / NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO.
REVISED.
27
July 2022
In
the matter between
JOEL
THABO MOHALALELO
And
JOHN
TSIETSI APHIRI T/A APHIRI ATTORNEYS
JUDGMENT
HOLLAND-MUTER
AJ:
In this matter, case
number 67331/2018, it is the matter of Joel Thabo Mohalalelo versus
John Tsietsi Aphiri trading as Aphiri or
formerly trading as Aphiri
Attorneys. The matter was allocated by the acting Judge
President to myself on 2 June 2022. That
is last Thursday. When
informed by my registrar the case number as is practice in this
division I accessed the pleadings
in the matter on the CaseLines
system which is an operation in this division.
The reason why I had to
access the documents electronically is because no hard copies of the
filing system is any longer in operation
in this court.
During the course of
myself acquainting myself with what was the case, the pleadings
et
cetera
the plaintiff’s counsel Mr Bouwer accompanied by his
attorney and assistant as well as the defendant in person called to
my chambers to introduce themselves.
There a discussion
occurred between myself and the parties in particular with Mr Bouwer
at first with regard to the
locus standi
of the parties and as
to whether the Legal Practitioners Council should not have been
joined as a second defendant.
In view thereof that as
at that stage I determined that the plaintiff’s claim against
the defendant in person arises out of
when the defendant then still
an admitted and practicing attorney represented the plaintiff in
another case against the Road Accident
Fund.
It is common cause
between the parties that that case was finalised during 2015/2016, I
am not at the moment in possession of the
specific date but be that
as it may. It is common cause that the Road Accident Fund made
certain payments towards the defendant’s
then trust account as
the attorney on behalf of the third party.
That amount was in excess
of R1 600 000 consisting of a capital of about 1 400 000
and 202 000 tax cost
amount. Difficulties arose between
the now plaintiff, plaintiff in that matter then and his then
instructing attorney, the
defendant before Court of the payment of
the award being made and paid out on behalf of the plaintiff towards
the trust fund of
Mr Aphiri.
Without venturing into
much detail at some stage during 2018 there was an agreement, a
settlement agreement reached between the
plaintiff and Mr Aphiri in
person and just after that Mr Aphiri had the unfortunate repercussion
of being struck off the roll as
a practicing attorney by this
division.
Only one payment,
substantial payment was made, R200 000 and two small payments of
R10 000 subsequently was made towards
the plaintiff and the
plaintiff avers that the defendant not honouring the agreement, the
subsequent agreement between them forced
him to issue summons against
the plaintiff.
The fact that out of the
papers it came to my notice that Mr Aphiri was struck off the roll as
a matter of precaution I asked the
parties on Thursday 2 June to file
before close of business the following day, this is Friday 3 June
answers to the questions which
I posed.
Those questions
predominantly related to the position of the Fidelity Fund of the
Legal Practitioners Council, whether or not they
should be a party to
this and secondly I raised the concern and said that I may consider
reporting or handing over this matter
or directing it to be handed
over to the Legal Practitioners Council as well as the Director of
Public Prosecutions because it
may amount to theft of money, monies
which were paid into a trust account but were not in terms of trust
account regulations paid
to the person to whom it accrued.
During the late afternoon
of the 2
nd
after having discussion with a colleague of
mine, a judge in this division who was, before I was appointed
involved in the management
of the Legal Practitioners Council and the
Fidelity Fund I decided, and it is correct that Mr Bouwer indicated
that the rules are
there to serve the Court and the parties and I
decided that the parties must come today that is on the 8
th
so that we can continue with this matter.
I did not have contact
details of the defendant and without any other intention phoned Mr
Bouwer just to request him to arrange
with the defendant so that they
both be here today so that if possible the matter can proceed.
I have indicated that I
received written heads from both parties but yesterday afternoon
after lunch while my registrar was occupied
with other duties out of
her office there was a knock on the door and it was the defendant in
person who wanted to serve an application
for the recusal of myself
in the matter.
I refused to accept such
service because it is not how service is done. It should be
served at the general office, not even
at the office of an individual
registrar ...[indistinct] a judge.
I directed Mr Aphiri that
he may have copies available today when proceedings proceed.
The gist thereafter of the discussion
and which I had to reprimand Mr
Aphiri several times with regard to the manner in which he addressed
the Court I was furnished
with the application of the notice of
motion in which requested that I recuse myself.
The application and the
affidavit accompanying the application, the affidavit is nine pages
and it is a two pager application.
Although the bundle which
was handed up to the Court today annexed thereto is a copy of the
combined summons, notice to defend,
plea, amended particulars of
claim, pre-trial minutes, the notice to amend though I do not know
what to amend and the defendant’s
notice in terms of rule 23(1)
and 30(2)(b) and then another notice of motion, the kind not known.
The application is
brought on three grounds. Now if I can refer to paragraph 6 on
page 6 thereof.
5.1. Hostility
towards the party.
5.2. Expression of
an opinion indicative of biasness.
5.3. The conduct
indicative of biasness.”
5.1 and 5.2 in my view is
mere semantical proposition. It is basically the same aspect.
If you look at 4.6.1.1:
“
There
must be a suspicion that the judicial officer might be biased.”
That is basically 5.2 and
or 5.3.
“
4.6.2.
The suspicion must be that of a reasonable person in the position of
a litigant.
5.6.3. The
suspicion must be based on reasonable grounds.”
That is the gist of the
application to recuse myself. The applicant or the defendant in
this matter was granted more than
enough opportunity to argue his
matter and the Court allowed him to refer to certain clauses in the
Constitution. Starting
with equality, no discrimination is to
be there and unfairness and in terms of section 165 of the
Constitution the independence
of the judges to the Constitution.
The independence of the
Court there was no grounds forwarded in the argument by Mr Aphiri to
this Court that the independence of
this Court is jeopardising
anything what I did as from last Thursday until this morning.
I see no factual averment
on this. The fact that I called Mr Bouwer is only because I did
not have, and I still at this stage
do not have the personal contact
number of the defendant and I just made a courteousy call to Mr
Bouwer so that we can see if we
can advance the matter today.
The question of hostility
I reject such an allegation towards me; I reject an unsubstantiated
allegation of racism to such an extent
that I take exception to such
an accusation against myself.
I never in this matter in
any way directly or indirectly mentioned anything or did anything
from which it can be inferred that my
handling of the matter was
biased and or based on racism towards the defendant.
There is nothing about
that. The fact that I mentioned that the matter, I consider
referring it to the National Director of
Public Prosecutions there is
nothing wrong with that because any trust money paid into a trust on
behalf of a recipient, in this
instance the plaintiff if it was not
paid out to him but utilised as it is done rather commonly by
practicing attorneys is to finance
other matters which they have and
then later to a recalculation that amounts to theft because they are
not allowed in terms of
the conditions of a trust account to use
trust funds which accrued to client A to finance and or to subside
the litigation of client
B, C or D.
It is quite clear that
that is theft.
In various instances in
my acting capacity since 2015 in this court where matters were
brought to this Court by the Legal Practitioners
Council or the then
Law Society it is an accepted fact that utilising trust monies for
other purposes than that for the purpose
of which it was deposited
into the trust account amounts to theft.
Be that as it may, and
that is why I considered it and I made the remark that it may be
referred to the Director of Public Prosecutions
and the Legal
Practitioners Council so that they can attend to this if necessary.
I have not done so but
the future will tell. The defendant or the applicant in this,
the defendant gave a long, long, long
argument on his side to try and
show any biasness on my side. I am not, I am not at all
persuaded in any way that I was hostile
or biased or discriminatory
towards any of the parties before the Court in particular the
defendant, now applicant.
The fact however is that
there is an application in terms of rule 36(2) by the defendant at a
very late stage, roundabout 26 May
2022, that is less than 10 days
before the trial had to proceed for the plaintiff to be subjected to
a medical examination, still
unresolved.
There is also the fact
that the defendant also gave notice of his intention to amend his
plea and that the 15 days awarded there
for by the plaintiff for him
to take the necessary actions to correct his documentation takes us
way beyond 2 June.
The only, the only
reasonable inference to be drawn for this late application and notice
to amend on behalf of the respondent can
be taken back to the
pre-trial of 13 May 2022 between the parties in paragraph, please
just bear with me, paragraph 6 where the
defendant was of the view
the estimation of the duration of the trial, plaintiff said one to
two days, defendant was of the view
the matter is not ready due to
pending interlocutory aspects regarding rules 30, 57(8) and so on and
...[indistinct].
When roll call was
conducted on the morning of 2 June Mr Aphiri does not deny that he
was not present, it was only Mr Bouwer and
the information which my
registrar received from the acting Judge President’s registrar
when the matter was allocated to
this Court is that it was, the view
was that it could be one to two hours and that is why I was not only
allocated one matter but
two matters because of the time frames which
were addressed to the acting Judge President.
To summarise then with
regard to the application that I must recuse myself I am not
convinced that any reasonable Court under the
circumstances would
consider it favourably and that application is dismissed.
The question of costs
with regard to the allegations made by the applicant or the defendant
in this matter I reluctantly will only
award party and party costs
against the applicant in this matter.
I have been considering a
cost order on an attorney and client scale but in view of everything
before the Court party and party
scale would suffice.
With regard to the new
aspects which now arose which was not mentioned at roll call, which
was not mentioned on Thursday the 2
nd
before me that the
outstanding, and in view thereof that the defendant orally indicated
to Court that he is subtracting his application
in terms of rule 30,
36(2) and rule 57 with regard to the
compos mentis
state of
the plaintiff it seems now from what he argued today and what is in
his heads of argument is that he has reconsidered
that position and
is persisting with that.
I am not going to
pronounce any verdict on that but my
prima facie
view is that
it is without substance such an application but also in all fairness
to grant him the opportunity with his application
to amend he will be
granted the opportunity and that can be, it is a small skirmish which
can take place in the interlocutory and
or motion court.
To conclude this matter
will not proceed today. This matter will not proceed, not that
I am not willing to but I will grant
the defendant the opportunity to
bring these applications and as it works here the possibility of this
matter being awarded to
myself unless I specifically request to do so
is so remote that it can be neglected, the only aspect now to the
parties, I will
give you the opportunity starting with Mr Bouwer is
to address me on the costs, the wasted costs because of the
non-attendance
of roll call by the defendant to indicate to the
acting Judge President that the matter was not right for hearing and
his outstanding
issues with regard to the application or the
amendment notice of the plea and a special plea, to demonstrate my
fairness and un-biasness
towards the defendant I will grant him that
opportunity to have those applications heard but unless he convinces
me, and that is
why I am going to give both parties the opportunity
to address me, he knew long before 13 May 2022 when the pre-trial was
conducted
that he was of the opinion that the plaintiff may, or
should be assessed by a neurologist to determine whether he may or
may not
be in a position to give proper instructions.
That is not something
new, it has been coming for a long time and the conduct of the
defendant at this late stage being the spoke
into the wheel which
brings or grinds this matter to a halt that it cannot proceed to its
full conclusion on the merits, also in
view of certain admissions
made in the pre-trial minutes I am
prima facie
of the view
that the defendant should be liable for attorney and client costs
occasioned by the, the wasted costs occasioned by
the proceedings of
the 2
nd
and of today. Mr Bouwer anything from your
side with regard to costs?
(ADDRESS TO FOLLOW)
---
- - - - - - - - - - -
In this matter, case
number 67331/2018, matter between Joel Thabo Mohalalelo and plaintiff
John Tsietsi Aphiri, defendant I have
already ruled that an
application for recusal of myself is dismissed with costs. With
regards to the matter not being right
for trial I have read the
pre-trial minutes between the parties embodied in the document dated
13 May 2022.
It is also so that the
defendant at a very late stage filed a notice of intention to amend
his plea to bring in a special plea as
well as an application, in my
view but be that as it may, incorrectly in terms of rule 36(2) for
the plaintiff to be submitted
for medical examination.
I am not closing the
doors on the defendant with regards to this but it is also so that
the defendant is not a layperson.
He should know that there are
times when you act proactively and not as we have heard it over the
last couple of years, make use
of Stalingrad defence and that is
defence at number 99.
This could have been
done, the application to have the plaintiff examined by a medical
expert to determine whether he is of full
mental capacity to give
proper instructions and secondly the application which was at number
99 filed, or the notice which was
at number 99 filed by the defendant
to have his plea amended with the insertion of a special plea, there
is no other reasonable
inference that this is to a large extent
delaying and the fact that the matter or the reason that the matter
cannot proceed either
on last Thursday or today on the merits because
of the reluctance of the defendant to get out of the blocks and to do
things according
to the timeframe which is necessary of which he is
known to because of his previous experience.
Under these circumstances
it would be proper that the following order be granted:
1.
The Application for the Recusal is
dismissed with costs against the defendant on a party and party
scale;
2.
The matter is postponed sine die to enable
the defendant to proceed/finalise the Rule 36(2) application and the
amendment of his
plea;
3.
The defendant is to pay the costs
occasioned by the postponement on an attorney and client scale. The
costs is to include the costs
of 2 June 2022 and 8 June 2022, which
will include the plaintiff’s necessary costs incurred to attend
court on the aforementioned
dates.
4.
The plaintiff is declared a necessary
witness.
HOLLAND-MUTER AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
DATE
:27
July 2022
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Mohale v Heads Tractor (Pty) Ltd and Others (23553/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 876 (17 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 876High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Mohlalhlane and Others v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 94; A208/19; 2023 (1) SACR 540 (GP) (23 February 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 94High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Mohlaloga v S (A208/2019) [2025] ZAGPPHC 1130 (13 October 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 1130High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Mohale v Office of the Chiefmaster and Another (21462/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1151 (15 September 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1151High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Maphalle v South African Police Service and Others (B38945/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 875 (17 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 875High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar