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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 694
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## Legal Practice Council v Spies (55628/20)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 694 (16 September 2022)
Legal Practice Council v Spies (55628/20)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 694 (16 September 2022)
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sino date 16 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 55628/20
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
13
SEPTEMBER 2022
IN
THE MATTER BETWEEN:
LEGAL
PRACTICE COUNCIL
APPLICANT
AND
JO
FRANCOIS
SPIES
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MPOFU
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application
in terms whereof the South African Legal
Practice Council, (the 'LPC') seeks an
order to remove the respondent's name, Jo Francois Spies, from the
roll of attorneys of this
Court, alternatively, that the respondent
be
suspended
from
practising
as an
attorney.
The
applicant
also seeks other ancillary relief, as
will become clear later in this judgment.
[2]
Briefly, the applicant is the
custodian and repository of the rules of the conduct of the legal
profession, it also plays an oversight
role over the conduct of legal
practitioners.
[3]
Furthermore, the applicant
discharges its mandate through the application of the Legal Practice
Act, 28 of 2014, (the 'LPA'), and
effectively succeeds the Law
Society of South Africa and its provincial arms, (the Law Society).
[4]
The respondent was admitted on the
Roll of attorneys on 19
th
July 2001. Through the period, he practised as a sole practitioner
under the name and style of Spies JF Attorneys, in Mokopane,
Limpopo.
BACKGROUND
FACTS
[5]
The applicant alleges that the
respondent contravened several provisions of the LPA and rules of the
Law Society, attorneys
profession,
legal practice
rules and code of conduct in that:
[a]
He failed to submit his firm's
Auditor's Report for the financial periods ending 28 February
2017; 28 February
2018 and 28 February 2019.
[b]
He practised
without
Fidelity
Fund
certificates
from O1 January
2018 to date.
[c]
He failed to effect payment of his
mandatory LPC annual membership fees
in
respect of2019 and 2020, totalling
R8 120.00, (Eight Thousand, One Hundred and Twenty Rand)
[6]
Furthermore, that the respondent was
summoned to appear be before a disciplinary committee of the Council
of the Law Society which
was scheduled for 23rd November 2017 to
answer to charges of unprofessional, dishonourable or unworthy
conduct in contravention
of Rule 35, 22 read
with
Rule
35,
23
and 35,19 of the Rules for the Attorney's profession, in that, he
failed to furnish the Law Society within six months after the
annual
closing of his books of account, a report in its original format by
his Auditor or inspector for the period ending 28 February
2017.
[7]
The respondent failed to attend the
disciplinary
hearing
as a result of which a further charge in terms of Rule 47.3 of the
Rules for the Attorneys profession was added to the aforementioned
charges.
[8]
The respondent was again summoned to
appear before a disciplinary committee to be held on 14th February
2018 to face charges of
unprofessional, dishonourable, unworthy
conduct in contravention of Rule 35.22 read with Rules 35.23 and
35.19, and Rule 47.3 read
with Rule 47.2. Save for the foregoing,
respondent failed to attend yet again.
[9]
On
27th
July
2018,
the Council
addressed
a letter
to
the
respondent
enclosing a report from
the disciplinary
committee
in keeping
with
Rule
50.18.2 of the Attorneys profession.
[10]
The
Council
further
requested
the
respondent
to
provide
reasons
why
an application
should not be brought for the removal of
his name from the
Roll
of
practising
attorneys.
The
respondent
did
not
furnish
such reasons, notwithstanding the
Council's lawful and reasonable request.
[11]
In addition to the respondent's
contravention of the Law Society and /or LPC Rules as discernible
herein above, one Sean Balfour
Mervor (Mervor), respondent's family
friend reportedly, also lodged a complaint against the respondent on
5th July 2017. Mervor
allegedly instructed respondent to draw up an
ante nuptial contract, (ANC), in his favour, to regulate his marriage
to his fiance.
In the ensuing mandate, respondent allegedly undertook
not to charge Mervor for drafting the ANC, save for fees and
disbursements
due and payable in favour of respondent's correspondent
attorneys who were based in Pretoria.
[12]
According to the complaint, Mervor
discovered that the antenuptial contract was never registered at the
Deeds Office, furthermore,
Mervor did not receive a receipt
acknowledging the R 1 000.00, (One Thousand Rand), paid towards the
fees of the aforesaid correspondent
attorney. As a consequence of
respondent's aforesaid remiss conduct, the correspondent
attorney
failed
to
execute his instructions to lodge and register the antenuptial
contract at the Deeds Office.
[13]
Save for the foregoing, the Law
Society referred Mervor's complaint
to
the respondent on 18th August 2017, also
requesting respondent to comment thereon on or before 18th September
2017. Save for the
foregoing, respondent failed to heed applicant's
lawful and reasonable request by favouring it with the courtesy
of a reply or comment in response to the
complaint.
ISSUES
TO BE DECIDED
[14]
The pith of the applicant's
application is that the respondent is no longer a fit and proper
person to practice as an attorney when
viewed in light of
respondent's aforementioned conduct in its entirety, which conduct
constitutes aberrant deviation from the standards
of professional
conduct set by the Law Society and its successor, the LPC.
[15]
This Court is confronted with the
following:
[a]
The task of making
a
judgment
call
whether
as
a
matter
of fact, the offending conduct on
respondent's part has been established;
[b]
In the event of the Court being
satisfied
that
the offending conduct has
been
established, a value
judgment
is
required
to decide whether respondent
is
not
a
fit
and
proper
person
to
practice
as
an
attorney; and.
[c]
If the Court decides that the
respondent is not a fit and proper person to practice as an attorney,
it must decide in the exercise
of its discretion within all the
circumstances of the case the attorney in question is to be removed
from the roll or merely suspended
from
practice. Ultimately this is a question of degree.
[16]
Based on the facts presented
and before it, this Court
is clothed
with the exercise of its discretion. For
this reason, such facts must be proven on a preponderance of
probabilities. Such exercise
of discretion also calls for a
consideration
of
the
facts
in
their
entirety;
and
each
issue
must
be
considered in isolation.
# FACT
BASED INFRACTIONS OF THE RULES
FACT
BASED INFRACTIONS OF THE RULES
## The
respondent's repeated failure to comply with rule 70 auditor's report
The
respondent's repeated failure to comply with rule 70 auditor's report
[17]
Notwithstanding annual calls from
the LPC, it is beyond argument that for an uninterrupted
period of 3
(three) years,
to wit, February
2017, February
2018 and
February
2019,
respondent
failed
to
submit
his
auditor's reports.
## Respondent's
failure to attend to attend his disciplinary enquiry
Respondent's
failure to attend to attend his disciplinary enquiry
[18]
It is common cause that respondent
failed to attend a disciplinary enquiry when invited to do so to
answer to allegations which
were levelled against him.
## Practising
without a fidelity fund certificate
Practising
without a fidelity fund certificate
[19]
Respondent
has
been
practising
without
a
Fidelity
Fund
Certificate.
An inference
is capable of being drawn
without
equivocation
that
the
respondent was practising without a Fidelity Certificate because he
did not submit his auditor's reports as alluded to. No explanation
was proffered
by the respondent for this material
breach of the rules.
## Respondent's
failure to enter into intention to oppose applicant's appliaction and
file an answering affidavit thereto
Respondent's
failure to enter into intention to oppose applicant's appliaction and
file an answering affidavit thereto
[20]
Since this application was
initiated, the respondent did not file an intention to oppose it,
neither did he file an affidavit in
answer thereto.
# SURVEY
AND ANALYSIS
SURVEY
AND ANALYSIS
[21]
The requirement of and purpose of
submitting annual audit reports is to satisfy the LPC that an
attorney's accounting records are
kept in accordance with the
provisions of Rule 70 and Rule 39.11 of the LPA. This includes that
attorneys are enjoined to handle
and administer trust funds entrusted
upon them by their clients
in
a manner prescribed by the said Rules. Consequently, a failure to
submit these reports constitutes a breach of rule 70 and Rule
39.11.
[22]
With the court having found that the
offending conduct has been established as evinced above, the court
then exercises a value judgment,
to arrive at a decision whether the
respondent is a fit and proper person to practice as an attorney. The
court has regard to all
the circumstances of the case and proceeds to
determine whether the respondent should be removed from the roll or
to impose a period
of suspension from practice for a specified period
or to impose a fine where appropriate.
[23]
In
Malan
&
Another
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces,
[1]
the
SCA pronounced that this ultimately boils down to a question of
degree.
[2]
[24]
For present purposes, it is
convenient to take cognizance of the self-explanatory yet meritorious
enunciation of the self-same SCA
case, regarding respectively, the
second and third phase of the inquiry, namely,
"[5]
As far as the second leg of the inquiry
is concerned, it is well to remember that the Act contemplates that
where an attorney is
guilty of unprofessional or dishonourable or
unworthy conduct different consequences may follow. The nature of the
conduct may
be such that it establishes that the person is not a fit
and proper person to continue to practise. In other instances, the
conduct
may not be that serious and a law society may exercise its
disciplinary powers, particularly by imposing a fine or reprimanding
the attorney (section 72(2)(a)). This does not, however, mean that a
court is powerless if it finds the attorney guilty of unprofessional
conduct where such conduct does not make him unfit to continue to
practise as an attorney. In such an event the court may discipline
the attorney by suspending him from practice with or without
conditions or by reprimanding him: Law Society of the
Cape of
Good Hope v C
1986
(1J
SA
616
(AJ
at 638l-639E; Law Society of the Cape of Good Hope v Berrange
2005
(SJ
SA
160
(C)
at
1730-1,
(20061
1
AH
SA
290
(C) at 302.
[6]
As pointed out in Jasat, the third leg
is also a matter for the discretion of the court of first instance,
and whether a court will
adopt the one course or the other depends
upon such factors as the nature of the conduct complained of, the
extent to which it
reflects upon the person's character or shows him
to be unworthy to remain in the ranks of an honourable profession,
the likelihood
or otherwise of a repetition of such conduct and the
need to protect the public. Ultimately it is a question of degree. It
is here
where there appears to be some misunderstanding.
[7]
First, in deciding on whichever course
to follow the court is not first
and
foremost
imposing a penalty.
The
mam
consideration
is
the protection
of
the public.
[8]
Second, logic
dictates
that
if
a court
finds
that
someone
is
not a fit and proper person to continue to practise as an attorney,
that person must be removed from the roll. However, the Act
contemplates a suspension. This means that removal does not follow as
a matter of course. If the court has grounds to assume that
after the
period of suspension the person will be fit to practise as an
attorney in the ordinary course of events, it would not
remove him
from the roll but order an appropriate suspension. In this regard the
following must be borne in mind:
"The
implications of an unconditional order removing an attorney from the
roll for misconduct are serious and far reaching.
Prima facie,
the Court which makes such an order visualises that the offender will
never again be permitted to practise his profession
because
ordinarily such an order is not made unless the Court is of the
opinion that the misconduct in question is of so serious
a nature
that it manifests character defects and lack of integrity rendering
the person unfit to be on the roll. If such a person
should in the
years apply for re admission, he will be required to satisfy the
Court that he is "a completely reformed character"
(Ex
parte Wilcocks
1920
TPD 243
at 245) and
that his "reformation or rehabilitation is, in all the known
circumstances, of a permanent nature" (Ex parte
Knox
1962(1) SA
778 (N) at 784). The very stringency of the test for re-admission is
an index to the degree of gravity of the misconduct
which gave rise
to disbarment. "
Page
5 of
120071 JOL 22426
(SCA) (Incorporated Law Society,
Natal v Roux
1972 (3) SA 146
(N) at 1508-E quoted with approval
in Cirota v Law Society Transvaal
1979
(1) SA 172
(A)
at 1948-D.) It is seldom, if ever, that a mere suspension from
practice
for
a given
period
in
itself
will
transform
a
person
who
is unfit to practise into one who is fit to practise. Accordingly, as
was
noted
in
A
v
Law
Society
of
the
Cape
of
Good
Hope
1989
(1) SA 849
(A)
at 852E-G, it is implicit in the Act that any order of suspension
must be conditional upon the cause of unfitness being removed.
For
example, if an attorney is found to be unfit of continuing to
practise because of an inability to keep proper books, the conditions
of suspension must be such as to deal with the inability. Otherwise
the unfit person will return to practice after the period of
suspension with the same inability or disability. In other words, the
fact that a period of suspension of say 5 years would be
a sufficient
penalty for the misconduct does not mean that the order of suspension
should be 5 years. It could be more to cater
for rehabilitation or,
if the court is not satisfied that the suspension will rehabilitate
the attorney, the court ought to strike
him from the roll. An
attorney who is the subject of striking application and who wishes a
court to consider this lesser option,
ought to place the court in the
position of formulating appropriate conditions of suspension.
[9]
Third, the exercise of this discretion
is not bound
by
rules,
and precedents consequently
have
a limited value. All they do is to indicate how other courts have
exercised their discretion in the circumstances of a particular
case.
Facts are never identical, and the exercise of a discretion
need
not
be the same in similar cases. If a court
were
bound
to follow
a
precedent
in
the exercise of
its
discretion
it
would
mean
that
the
court
has
no
real
discretion. (See Naylor v Jansen
2007
(1) SA
16
(SCA) at paragraph 21.)"
[25]
As shown in the applicant's papers,
respondent has practised for a period of at least 3 (three) years
without submitting his audit
reports; has practiced without a
Fidelity Certificate; his conduct has fallen short of the required
standard
in
his handling of the Mervor case; absented himself from a disciplinary
enquiry instituted by the applicant to enquire into his
alleged
remiss conduct; he has not proffered a semblance of explanation for
his apparent failures under the Rules whose contravention
he was
answerable for; above all, he did not file any opposition and
affidavit in answer to the application against him.
[26]
The third enquiry consists in an
appropriate disciplinary outcome, accepting that respondent's
unprofessional conduct inter alia,
does not mean that his removal in
relation to the third enquiry, the fact that respondent acted
unprofessionally does not lead
to his automatic removal.
[27]
To sum up, the determination is
consequently that the offending conduct has been established on a
balance of probabilities.
[28]
The
applicant
has
called
into
question
respondent's
reprehensible conduct
which
was
found
to
be
unprofessional,
dishonourable
and unworthy,
and
that
he
cannot
be
considered
to
be
a
fit
and
proper
person to remain on the roll of attorneys. Having considered all the
facts on whose basis I am entitled to exercise a discretion,
I am in
respectful agreement with the applicant as substantiated
by such facts.
# SANCTION
SANCTION
[29]
In my exercise of a value judgment
required for the imposition of an
appropriate sanction, I take into account that the unchallenged
transgressions are numerous and
extend over a period of time.
[30]
I am of the view
that an order striking off the
respondent
is
appropriate
order.
# COSTS
COSTS
[31]
It
is
ordered
that
the
respondent
must
pay
the
costs
of
the
application
on
the
tariff as between attorney and client.
# ORDER
ORDER
[32]
In the result, I make the following
order:-
a)
That Jo Francois Spies is removed
from the roll of
attorneys and the applicant is ordered
to adjust its records accordingly;
b)
That he surrenders and delivers his
certificate of enrolment as an attorney to the registrar of this
Honourable Court;
c)
In the event the respondent fails to
comply with the terms of the order in the preceding paragraph 'b',
within two weeks from the date of this
order, the sheriff of the district in which the certificate is, be
authorised and directed
to take possession of the certificate, and to
hand it over to the registrar of this Honourable Court;
d)
The respondent
is prohibited
from
handling
or
operating
on
his trust accounts;
e)
Johan Van Staden, the director of the
Gauteng
Office
of
the
applicant (or
his
successor
as
such)
be
appointed
as
curator
bonis
(curator)
to administer and control the trust
accounts of the respondent,
including
accounts relating to insolvent and deceased
estates and any estate under curatorship
connected
with the
respondent
s
practise
as an attorney
and including,
also
the
separate
banking
accounts
opened
and
kept
by
respondent at a bank in the
Republic
of South Africa
in
terms of section 86 (I)
and
(2) of
Act
28 of 2014
and
or
any
separate
or
interest
bearing accounts as contemplated
by
sec
86(3) or sec 86 (4)of Act 28 of 2014.
f)
Respondent shall comply with all orders
as per draft
order
which was made an order of court on the date of the hearing of this
application, being the 30 August 2022.
A
Mpofu
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Pretoria
I
agree, it so ordered
JS
Nyathi
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Pretoria
LEGAL
REPRESENTATIONS
For
the Appellants: Mr
Dawid Smith
Instructed
by:
: Mothle
Jooma Sabdia Inc
Nadinevs@mjs-inc.co.za
For
the Respondent: No
appearance
Instructed
by: N/A
Heard
on:
30 August 2022
Judgement
handed
down
on: 16
September 2022
[1]
[2008] JOL 22426 (SCA)
[2]
Ibid Malan at paragraph 5 to 9
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