Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 750South Africa
Nonxuba v South African Legal Practice Council and Another (11897/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 750 (6 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nonxuba v South African Legal Practice Council and Another (11897/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 750 (6 October 2022)
Nonxuba v South African Legal Practice Council and Another (11897/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 750 (6 October 2022)
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sino date 6 October 2022
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 11897/2022
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO
OTHERS JUDGES: NO
REVISED
6 October 2022
In
the matter between:
NONXUBA:
NOVELWANO ALICIA
Applicant
and
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
First Respondent
THE
LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL: GAUTENG Second
Respondent
PROVINCIAL
OFFICE
JUDGMENT
NDLOKOVANE
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1.]
This court is called upon to
inter alia
review and set aside
the decision of the first and/or second respondents made on or about
14 February 2022, in terms of which the
applicant's application for a
Fidelity Fund Certificate was refused; to declare that the applicant
have complied with all necessary
statutory requirements for the
issuing of a Fidelity Fund Certificate in her name and to compel the
Respondents to immediately
issue a Fidelity Fund Certificate to the
applicant.
[2.]
The application is opposed by the first and second respondents.
BACKGROUND
FACTS
[3.]
The factual background in this present application has been
succinctly summarised in the
applicant’s heads of arguments as
follows:
3.1 The
Applicant is an admitted attorney of this Court. She commenced
practicing as an attorney in her husband's (ZMM Nonxuba)
law firm,
Nonxuba Inc. in the beginning of 2018. Although she was a salaried
employee of Nonxuba Inc.
3.2. Due to the
ongoing litigation against her husband and his firm, and her concern
of the impact thereof on her as an attorney,
the Applicant resigned
from Nonxuba Inc. in September 2021. In October 2021 she established
her own practice, NA Nonxuba Attorneys.
She also opened her own trust
account. For the first time, as an attorney, the Applicant now
operates, controls and is responsible
for her own trust account.
3.3 The
Applicant applied for a Fidelity Fund Certificate for the year 2022.
This was done on the on-line application platform.
She successfully
completed all the required parameters of the on-line application
form. With regard to the submission of the audit
certificate
pertaining to her trust account, she advised that this is for the
future as she had only commenced practice in October
2021 and her
trust account was still to be audited.
3.4 On 8
February 2022, she was verbally advised that the Second Respondent
had an issue with the audit certificate of Nonxuba Inc.
3.5 On 14
February 2022, she was formally advised that her application for a
Fidelity Fund Certificate was declined. Attempts to
resolve the
matter with Mr. Van Staden the director of the first respondent
failed.
THE
PARTIES
[4.]
The applicant is a female major attorney and director of NA Nonxuba
Attorneys which practice is situated at 377 Rivonia Boulevard,
Rivonia, Johannesburg.
[5.]
The First Respondent was established as a body corporate in terms of
section 4 of the Act. And an institution exercising a
public power or
exercising a public function in terms of the Act and whose decision
in the present application is sought to be
corrected.
[6.]
The Second Respondent is the
LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL: GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL OFFICE
, situated Procforum Building 123 Paul Kruger
Street Pretoria and was established as a provincial council of the
First Respondent
in terms of section 23 of the Act and exercising a
public power or exercising a public function in terms of the Act.
THE
APPLICABLE LEGAL PRINCIPLES
[7.]
The requirements for a Fidelity Fund Certificate are set out in
Chapter 7 of the Act and in particular sections 84 and 85 of
the
Legal Practice Act (the act). These sections are to be read with the
rules 47, 48 ,49 and 54 of the LPC Rules.
[8.]
Section 84(1) of the Act provides that every attorney (other
than those exempt) who practise or is deemed to practise
for their
own account either alone or in partnership or who is a director of a
practice, which is a juristic entity, must be in
possession of a
Fidelity Fund Certificate. Section 84(5) provides that a legal
practitioner referred to in subsection who (a) transfer
from one
practice to another or (b) ceases to practice, must give notice of
this fact to the council and comply with the relevant
requirements in
relation to the closure of that legal practitioner’s trust
account and in the case of para(b) returns his
certificate to the
council.
[9.]
Section 85 of the Act prescribes the statutory procedure for the
applying of and issuing of a Fidelity Fund Certificate. A
practitioner who is obliged to be in possession of a Fidelity Fund
Certificate is obliged to apply for such certificate in terms
of the
rules.
Rule
47 of the South African Legal Practice Council Rules made under the
authority of Sections 95(1), 85(3) and 109(2) of the Legal
Practice
Act (the Rules') details the specific requirements which need to be
met in order for a legal practitioner to apply for
a Fidelity Fund
Certificate.
[10.]
Section 86(1) provides that every legal practitioner referred to in
s.84(1) must operate a trust account. This section must
be read with
Rule 54(19) which provides:
Responsibility
for ensuring compliance
“
54.19
Every partner of a firm, and every director of a juristic entity will
be responsible for ensuring that the provisions of the
Act and of
those rules relating to the trust account of the firm are complied
with”.
[11.]
Again
Section 19(3)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
provides that:
“
If a
company is a personal liability company, the directors or past
directors are jointly and several liable together with the company,
for any debts and liabilities of the company that were contracted
during the respective period of their directorship”
.
[12.]
The Applicant contends that she has complied with all the
requirements for a Fidelity Fund Certificate to be issued to her.
Her
application was completed in terms of Schedule 7B as envisaged in
Rule 49.
The Applicant relies upon certain provisions of PAJA in
seeking an order to review and set aside the Respondents' decision of
refusing
to issue the Applicant with a Fidelity Fund Certificate. In
contrast, the respondent contends in its answering affidavit that the
Applicant's request for the issuance of a Fidelity Fund Certificate
was refused for valid legal reasons and same are not impugnable.
These reasons include:
12.1 That the
Applicant did not meet the requirements necessary to be issued with a
Fidelity Fund Certificate;
12.2 ln respect
of the audit report of Nonxuba Inc. for 2021, the Applicant was
referred to
section 84(1)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
and
Rule 47 of the LPC Rules;
12.3 Section
47.7.1 is dealt with in detail regarding Fidelity Fund Certificates
when issued to a practitioner for the first time.
12.4 Mention was
made of the ongoing litigation and the management of the trust
account of Nonxuba Inc., which concerns are subject
to ongoing
litigation under WCHC case number 10313/21. The Applicant is a party
thereto, joined to the proceedings as the Third
Respondent. In terms
of
section 85(6)(a)
of the
Legal Practice Act, the
Respondents must
be satisfied that an applicant for a Fidelity Fund Certificate has
complied with the provisions of Chapter 7 of
the
Legal Practice Act
and
that the Respondents are not so satisfied because the facts upon
which the application in the WCHC is based, clearly establish that
the provisions of
section 87(1)
of the
Legal Practice Act has
not
been complied with. The letter succinctly deals with compliance with
Chapter 7 of the
Legal Practice Act. In
the final analysis, the
Respondents concluded that the Applicant did not comply with the
provisions in Chapter 7 of the
Legal Practice Act.
>
GROUNDS
FOR REVIEW ON TERMS OF PAJA
[13.]
The applicant in her founding papers states that, the decision of the
respondents to refuse her application for a Fidelity
Fund Certificate
is unlawful for the following reasons:
“
In
terms of
section 6(2)(a)(iii)
and
6
(2)(e)(ii) of PAJA, I reasonably
apprehend that LPC: Gauteng or LPCSA and Mr Van Staden (or the
decision maker(s) if not him) are
biased or reasonably suspected of
bias against me and have an ulterior purpose or motive in refusing my
application for a certificate.
He/they certainly is/are not
exercising a rational and reasonable decision-making mind. He/they
is/are either acting purely on
instructions of others and not
exercising an independent mind, or he/they is/are biased against me
for reasons within his/their
own mind.
Mr Van Staden
is currently the curator of the trust account of Nonxuba Inc., as per
the court order of Le Roux AJ dated 14 August
2021. He is clearly
fully appraised of the ongoing litigation referred to above. He
certainly knows the extent to which the applicant
is involved and not
involved in that litigation;
That in terms
of
section 6(2)(e)(ii)
of PAJA, the Respondents and Mr Van Staden's
decision is taken for an ulterior purpose or motive.;
that in terms
of
section 6(2)(d)
of PAJA, the Respondents and Mr Van Staden's
decision is influenced by an error of law. He has wrongly created an
additional requirement,
namely the acceptance of the audit
certificate of my previous employer, as a requirement for the
granting or refusing to grant
me a certificate. As indicated, there
is no such legal requirement.
He also
wrongly considered the fact that the LPC does not accept the audit
certificate of Nonxuba Inc. as a consideration in refusing
to grant
me a Fidelity Fund Certificate.”
[14.]
The Applicant to support her contentions sought reliance on the
unreported judgments in the matter of:
Law Society of the
Northern Provinces v Vijloen (094/2010) and Law Society of the
Northern Provinces v Dykes& others (646/2010)
(2010) ZASCA 176
(02 December 2010).
[15.]
The respondents in their heads of arguments submits that in the same
judgment, the court held contrary to the applicant’s
submissions and further submitted that the two unreportable
judgements are distinguishable from the present application. In that
the Law Society had obtained an interdict from the high court,
restraining Mr Setshogoe from practising at the time when he applied
for a fidelity fund certificate. It was in these circumstances that
the secretary refused to issue the fidelity fund certificate.
That is
not the case here. The Applicant's reliance on the above judgment is
misconceived. This application is distinguishable
from the facts in
the above judgment. In the current matter: There are pending
proceedings in the Western Cape High Court against
the Applicant and
her husband.
15.1 Considering
the seriousness of the case against the Applicant and her husband,
the court already granted an order divesting
the Applicant and her
husband from operating and transacting on the Nonxuba Inc trust
accounts. That matter, inter alia, has to
do with the management of
trust account.
14.2 A
curator
bonis
was appointed to administer all the medico-legal
litigation and to take control of the trust accounts.
15.3 The
Applicant and her husband consented to the court order which has such
invasive effect on their ability to practise law.
Although the
Applicant and her husband have not been suspended from practising
law, the order has the effect of suspension.
15.4
Accordingly, the Respondents acted responsibly in that they refused
to issue a Fidelity Fund Certificate to the Applicant.
[16.]
In the present case, I agree with the respondents’ submissions
in this regard in that the Applicant on her own version
states that
she has been working as a salaried employee in the firm of her
husband and occupied the position of a director since
12 February
2018. The applicant does not deny that she applied for a Fidelity
Fund Certificate for every financial year until 2021.
[17.]
Whether the Applicant was a
de facto or de jure
director is
neither here nor there; the law accommodates the position of a de
facto director and considers such incumbent in the
same way as the de
jure director. In fact, a
de facto
director owes all the same
statutory and common law duties to the juristic person as an
de
jure
director. Accordingly, the Applicant's excuse that her
name does not appear in the incorporation documents of Nonxuba Inc,
lodged at the CIPC, changes nothing. The fact remains that the
Applicant occupied the position of director. A finding that
the
Applicant was a director at Nonxuba Inc is dispositive of the
application.
[18.]
I am of the view that there is indeed overwhelming evidence before
court pointing only to one conclusion, that is the Applicant
was/is a
director at Nonxuba Inc. Although the Applicant claims that she
resigned her directorship at Nonxuba Inc, and contends
that the
respondents were notified of this, she could not refute the claim by
the respondent’s that their records show that
she remains a
director and the Respondents have no knowledge of the Applicant's
resignation. The application must therefore fail.
ORDER:
Consequently,
I make the following order:
19.1
The application is dismissed with costs on a party and party scale.
N
NDLOKOVANE AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered:
this judgment was prepared and authored by the judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically and by
circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Caselines.
The date for handing
down is deemed to be 06 October 2022
.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
ADV.
E
KILIAN SC
FOR
THE FIRST RESPONDENTS:
ADV.
C TSHAVHUNGWA
HEARD
ON:
28
JULY 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
06
OCTOBER
2022
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