Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 962South Africa
Mukwevho v Legal Practice Council (48650/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 962 (6 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mukwevho v Legal Practice Council (48650/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 962 (6 December 2022)
Mukwevho v Legal Practice Council (48650/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 962 (6 December 2022)
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sino date 6 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: 48650/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
REVISED.
2022-12-06
In
the matter between:
GIFT
MPHO
MUKWEVHO
Applicant
and
LEGAL
PRACTICE
COUNCIL
Respondent
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
[1]
The applicant in an amended notice of motion is applying for
condonation for the late
filing of his application to be admitted and
enrolled as a legal practitioner practising as an attorney. The
applicant also
seeks to be enrolled and admitted as an attorney in
terms of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
[the LPA].
[2]
The Legal Practice Council [LPC] did not oppose the condonation.
It did oppose
the admission and enrolment as an attorney on the basis
that the applicant is not a fit and proper person to be enrolled as a
legal
practitioner in contravention of
section 24(2)(c)
of the LPA.
[3]
Section 24(2)(c)
of the LPA should be read together with
Rule
17.2.14.2
which provides that each application for admission should
contain a statement of confirmation that the applicant is a fit and
proper
person to be admitted including a statement as to whether:
“
the
Applicant has been subjected to previous disciplinary proceedings by
the Council or any law society, university, or employer,
or whether
any such disciplinary proceedings are pending. If there have
been any proceedings as contemplated in this sub-rule,
or if any such
proceedings are pending, the Applicant shall set out full details
thereof.”
[4]
It is common cause that in the original founding affidavit the
applicant did not disclose
that he had two disciplinary hearings
against him. In fact, he declared as follows:
“
11.1.2
There are no previous disciplinary proceedings against me by the then
Law Society of the Northern Provinces (Gauteng Provincial Council),
the University of Limpopo or my Principal pending or about
to be
instituted against me nor have such proceedings ever been instituted
against me. I respectfully submit that I have
complied with
Rule 17.2.14.2
of Rules promulgated in terms of the Act.”
[5]
In the amended notice of motion an affidavit serving as
“
supplementary affidavit and confirmatory affidavit”
is attached. In paragraphs 1.8 and 1.9 he sought to
disclose the pending disciplinary before the Road Accident Fund [the
RAF],
his former employer. He then also discloses the charges
against him by his former principal where he was a candidate attorney
from September 2011 to November 2012. This affidavit proffers
an explanation for the non-disclosure of the disciplinary hearing
by
Mr Durand, his first principal, as “
a bona fide omission”
because the LPC was aware of this disciplinary hearing and
dismissal prior to the LPC authorising and registering his contract
with
his second principal. No explanation is forthcoming as to
why the RAF disciplinary hearing was omitted in the founding
affidavit.
[6]
The chronology in this matter is relevant. The applicant issued his
application for
admission on 28 September 2021, set down for hearing
on 4 November 2021. On 5 October 2021 the LPC sent an e-mail to
the
applicant with requests to correct mistakes and errors.
But, more importantly to clearly record that save for the
disciplinary
proceedings instituted against him by his first
principal [Durand] no other disciplinary hearings were instituted or
were pending.
On 12 October 2021 the LPC sent a further e-mail
to the applicant advising him that he failed to disclose the outcome
of the disciplinary
proceedings against him by RAF. The
applicant was informed that his failure to disclose the disciplinary
hearings was a serious
omission which affected the applicant’s
integrity to such an extent that he was not fit and proper. He
was advised
to refer his application to the Admissions and Practical
Vocational Training Committee for consideration. On 29 October
2021
the LPC requested the applicant to remove the application from
the roll, but he refused to. The court postponed the matter
sine die
for the LPC to consider the RAF disciplinary hearing
and address the court thereon.
[7]
The applicant refused to remove the application and filed a further
supplementary
affidavit with the purpose to explain in sufficient
details the disciplinary hearing before the RAF. In this
affidavit the
merits pertaining to the disciplinary hearing is
explained. He further submitted:
“
19.
I humbly submit that the nature of the charges against me were
operational in nature and do not indicate a moral
failure or lack of
integrity on my character.”
“
I
further submit that I am fit and proper person to be admitted as a
legal practitioner … I have referred my dismissal by
RAF to
the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA).”
[8]
In the LPC’s answering affidavit it set out that in an
ex
parte
application the applicant has a duty to be honest, display
integrity and complete
bona fides.
The two supplementary
affidavits were filed as “
damage control”
in an
attempt to salvage the founding affidavit that did not disclose the
disciplinary hearings. In paragraph 11.1.2 the
applicant under
oath expressing that there were no pending disciplinary hearings were
simply false. At paragraph 8 he mentioned
the articles of
clerkship he entered into, without disclosing the contract with the
previous employer. It was argued that
this fact was omitted not
to bring to light the disciplinary proceedings and measures that were
taken against him. This amounted
to a clear misrepresentation
by omission to conceal his previous delinquent behaviour. On behalf
of the LPC it was argued that
the applicant’s explanation of a
bona fide
error or mistake cannot reasonably be entertained.
[9]
The second supplementary affidavit sought to disclose the outcome of
the hearing.
But, the applicant should have taken the Court
into his confidence already in the founding affidavit. The two
supplementary
affidavits filed were filed to undo the material
non-disclosure in the founding affidavit. There was no basis to
allow these
affidavits and the court should not accept these
affidavits. Even more so because the applicant did not provide any
explanation
to show good cause as to why these affidavits should be
accepted and entertained by the court.
[10]
The explanation proffered by the applicant that the LPC knew of the
disciplinary hearing by his
first employer and therefore he did not
declare it in his founding affidavit is not a reasonable explanation
and is rejected.
The court needs to know about disciplinary
hearings, it is after all the court who has to exercise the
discretion to admit the
applicant, or not. The character of an
attorney would instinctively declare that there was a disciplinary
hearing, with a
caveat that the LPC is aware of this disciplinary. No
attorney would commit perjury by unequivocally stating that there was
no
disciplinary hearing. This untruthfulness is compounded by
not informing the court of the pending disciplinary hearing by
the
RAF. No explanation for this blatant untruth is forthcoming.
[11]
There is no other inference as that the applicant did not want to
take the court into his confidence
pertaining to the disciplinary
hearings. This inference is fortified by the applicant’s
omission in paragraph 8 of
the founding affidavit where he does not
refer to his employment with Mr. Durand which would have brought to
light the disciplinary
hearing.
[12]
Even if the court accepts the supplementary affidavits, the facts
therein support the contention
of the LPC that the applicant is not a
fit and proper person to enter the profession. The offending
conduct of making a dishonest
statement is established on a
preponderance of probabilities. Good faith is a
sine
qua non
for
an application brought
ex
parte.
[1]
When
any material facts are not disclosed, be it wilfully or
negligently
[2]
omitted a court
may on that ground alone dismiss an
ex
parte
application.
[3]
[13]
Honesty is considered an important prerequisite for a legal
practitioner to be fit and proper.
The founding affidavit in
paragraph 11.1.2 is untruthful; it emphatically sets out that the
applicant was not subjected to previous
disciplinary hearings by an
employer or has pending disciplinary hearings. Considering that
in the most important application,
so personal to the applicant; the
start of his career, he does not take the court into his confidence,
the question begs, why would
the applicant take the court into his
confidence with less “
important”
applications. Comparing this conduct against the expected
conduct of an attorney, the offending conduct is conduct that can
never be expected of an attorney.
[4]
[14]
The attorneys profession is an honourable one and demands “
complete
honesty, reliability and integrity from its members.”
[5]
I
find it necessary to quote paragraph 25 of the respondent’s
further supplementary affidavit:
“
25.
I have learnt from the process of this application that the integrity
of a legal practitioner goes beyond what one
perceives themselves,
but to what the practitioner can disclose which is more likely to
influence the Court’s judgment about
integrity of a legal
practitioner.”
This
statement is difficult to understand, but none the less disturbing in
that it shows the lack of insight the applicant has with
regard to
this application. He seemingly thought that the less he
discloses the more the Court’s judgment on integrity
would be
influenced. This candidate is not a fit and proper person to be
admitted. The argument was that based on this paragraph
the court
must find that the applicant had learnt his lesson and it was
unlikely that the conduct would be repeated. The tenure
of this
paragraph does not support such a contention. There is not a
single fact to sustain such argument. There also
has been no
effluxion of time to have this borne out. None of the case law
relied on by the applicant is relevant to this
application simply
because herein dishonesty was proven.
[15]
There is no reason to deviate from the normal cost order where
the LPC is concerned and
the applicant is to carry the costs on an
attorney and client scale.
[6]
[16]
Accordingly the application is dismissed with costs on the scale as
between attorney and client.
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
A.
CAJEE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NUMBER: 48650/2021
HEARD
ON:
24 November 2022
FOR
THE APPLICANT: ADV.
R. BALOYI
INSTRUCTED
BY: Mashambe
Inc Attorneys
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: ADV.
Z. MAHOMED
INSTRUCTED
BY: Mothle
Jooma Sabdia Inc.
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 6
December 2022
[1]
Thint
(Pty) Ltd v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others;
Zuma v National Director of Public Prosecutions and
Others
2009
(1) SA 1
(CC) at 115A-E.
[2]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Basson
2002
(1) SA 419
(SCA) at 428H-I
[3]
Hassan
and Another v Berrange NO
2012
(6) SA 329
(SCA) at 335G-H
[4]
Jasat
v Natal Law Society
2000
(3) SA 44
(SCA) para [10]
[5]
Vassen
v Law Society of the Cape of Good Hope
[1998] ZASCA 47
;
1998
(4) SA 532
(SCA) at 538G-H
[6]
Prokureursorde
van Transvaal v Kleynhans
1995
(1) SA 839
(T) at p865
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