Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 973South Africa
South African Legal Practice Council v Kokoloane Cyril Pitjeng (422/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 973 (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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## South African Legal Practice Council v Kokoloane Cyril Pitjeng (422/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 973 (6 December 2022)
South African Legal Practice Council v Kokoloane Cyril Pitjeng (422/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 973 (6 December 2022)
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sino date 6 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case
Number: 422/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
6/12/2022
In
the matter between:
# SOUTH
AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Applicant
SOUTH
AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Applicant
and
KOKOLOANE
CYRIL PITJENG
Respondent
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
Background
1]
On 2 September 2021, this Court
suspended the respondent from practising as an attorney pending
finalisation of the application.
The
Court also ordered the respondent to show cause on or before 28 April
2022 why his name should not be struck from the roll of
legal
practitioners.
The
respondent filed an answering affidavit shortly before the return
date.
On
the return date, the application was postponed to 24 November 2022,
the rule
nisi
was
extended, and the respondent was ordered to file a condonation
application for the late filing of his answering affidavit on
or
before 31 May 2022.
The
respondent filed an application for condonation, but was not present
on the return date of 24 November 2022.
2]
The respondent was admitted as a legal
practitioner (as an attorney) on 28 August 2012.
Until his suspension, he was practising
as a sole practitioner under the style of Pitjeng (KC) Attorneys in
Roodepoort, Gauteng.
He
commenced practising under Pitjeng (KC) Attorneys on 3 February 2016.
Conduct
of a legal practitioner pursuant to suspension
3]
Where
an order of suspension has been granted the Supreme Court of Appeal
has expressed that the conduct required of practitioners
in
proceedings of this nature
[1]
must place the full facts before Court for the Court to come to the
correct conclusion.
Broad
denials, evasiveness, and obstructionism should not form part of
disciplinary proceedings.
[2]
As
officers of the Court, practitioners are at all times expected to be
scrupulously honest and observe the utmost good faith in
their
dealings with the Court, even if it means disclosing information
which may be adverse to their own interests.
[3]
Where
allegations and evidence are presented against a legal practitioner,
they cannot simply be brushed aside,
the
legal practitioner concerned is expected to respond meaningfully to
them and to furnish a proper explanation.
[4]
The
offences
4]
Since 14 August 2009, every attorney
who, for the first time, practises for their own account or as a
partner in a firm of attorneys,
has been required to attend and
complete a practice management course. The respondent was required to
attend and complete this
course on or before 31 December 2017.
He has not done so.
5]
The respondent as required to submit an
auditor's report to the Council within six months of commencing
practice, covering the first
four months of such practice.
This report is commonly referred to as
an opening auditor's report and, in the respondent's instance, was
due for submission on
or before 31 August 2016.
He did not do so.
6]
The respondent is also required to
submit annual auditor's reports to the Council, reporting on his
firm's trust affairs, within
6 months of each financial year end.
The respondent has not filed any such
reports from inception of his practice, for the 2017, 2018, 2019 and
2020 years.
7]
Section 84(1)
of the
Legal Practice Act
28 of 2014
enjoins every attorney who practises or is deemed to
practise for his or her own account to be in possession of a Fidelity
Fund
Certificate [FFC].
Section
41(1) of the Attorneys Act contained a similar requirement.
An FFC is issued annually and is valid
from 1 January until 31 December.
It
is generally issued on the strength of an unqualified annual
auditor's report.
The
respondent was not in possession of an FFC from inception of his
practice on 3 February 2016. As a result of his failure to
submit his
opening and annual auditor's reports to the Council, and his failure
to attend and complete the PMT course, he has not
qualified for and
has not been issued with FFCs since 1 January 2017.
Analysis
of respondent's conduct
8]
The respondent's conduct is serious.
Not having a FFC is a contravention of a
peremptory norm, which is intent upon safeguarding the public, and he
committed an offence,
which is punishable by a fine or imprisonment.
9]
Every legal practitioner who is admitted
and enrolled as such is required to pay an annual fee to the Council.
The respondent has not paid his
membership fees to the Council for the 2017, 2018, 2019 and 20202
years.
These
fees amount to R14 162.00 and they remain outstanding.
10]
The respondent appeared before a
disciplinary committee of the Council on 21 November 2016 on a charge
relating to his failure to
submit his opening auditor's report.
The respondent pleaded guilty to the
charge.
A
fine was imposed in the amount of R4 000.00 of which R2 000.00 was
suspended for 3 years on condition that he not be found guilty
of a
similar offence during the suspension period.
The respondent failed to pay the fine
imposed by the disciplinary committee and has persisted in his
failure to submit his opening
auditor's report.
11]
The Council addressed letters to the
respondent,
inter alia,
recording
his continued failure to submit his opening auditor's report, his
failure to submit his annual auditor's reports and that
he is
practising without being in possession of an FFC.
The respondent did not reply to these
letters nor remedy his conduct.
12]
The Council addressed a letter to the
respondent on 21 February 2020 calling upon him to appear before a
disciplinary committee
of the Council on 16 March 2020 to answer to
charges relating to his failure to submit his 2017, 2018 and 2019
auditor's reports,
his failure to pay his annual membership fees, and
for practising without being in possession of an FFC.
The respondent did not respond to the
Council's letter nor did he appear before the disciplinary committee.
Respondent's
opposition
13]
In answer the respondent alleged that
his accounts had been closed.
He
did not provide any further detail in this regard and although he
attached a document that refers to as proof of his banking
details,
scrutiny of the document reveals that it is confirmation of the
existence of a business account for
Afriq
Attorneys.
It
is not proof of anything in relation to the respondent's firm.
He thus denies that he needed a Fidelity
Fund Certificate, pay membership fees or attend the Legal Practice
Management Training.
14]
Even if we were to accept that the
respondent's practice is closed; practitioners are required to close
their practice in compliance
with the Rules.
The respondent has not done so.
If his assertions are accepted at face
value, he appears to have simply abandoned his practice.
He submitted that he had taken up
employment with other employees.
The
fact that he had taken up employment with other employees was not a
bar to him practising and thus having to comply with the
Rules.
Guilty
of conduct
15]
The respondent has failed to comply with
peremptory obligations and legislative safeguards intended to protect
the public.
He
has done so for several years and has been unmoved by the Council's
efforts to bring him into compliance. He remains non-compliant,
notwithstanding these efforts and the pursuit of these proceedings.
16]
The high-water mark of the respondent's
answer is to allege that he has never represented or acted for any
person or presented himself
to any person or Court as a practising
legal practitioner and has never operated any offices or conducted
any business as a legal
practitioner.
However, the respondent opened a legal
practice and a trust banking account and informed the Council
accordingly. All of the legal
consequences of having opened his
practice follow, regardless of whether or not any clients have been
serviced.
He
is deemed to have practised.
He
did attend disciplinary proceedings before a disciplinary committee
and pleaded guilty to a charge relating to his failure to
submit an
opening auditor's report.
His
assertions leave this conduct unaddressed and not in compliance with
the conduct required of him pursuant to suspension.
The respondent's conduct does not meet
the standard of behaviour, conduct and reputation which is required
of attorneys and officers
of the Honourable Court. He can no longer
be considered a fit and proper person to be allowed to practise as a
member of a learned,
respected and honourable profession.
17]
The
question before Court is whether the respondent should be permitted
to continue practising as a legal practitioner in the prevailing
circumstances.
[5]
The
Court may make such order it deems appropriate in the circumstances.
The
exercise of this discretion is not bound by rules, and precedents
consequently have a limited value. Having regard to all the
circumstances brought before me, I am satisfied that the respondent
is not a fit and proper person to be entrusted with the important
duties and grave responsibilities which belong to an attorney.
For
the sake of the public, and no less the profession, it is of the
utmost importance to enforce on all attorneys the high standard
of
duty which rests upon them and demand the great integrity which is
expected of them.
[6]
18]
The respondent has been in possession of
the present application for 21 months.
His answer does not address his conduct,
and he appears unmoved to remedy his outstanding affairs.
His consistent nonchalance reflects a
dire lack of insight into the seriousness of his conduct.
19]
The respondent was called upon to show
cause why his name should not be struck from the roll.
Him having not addressed his conduct, it
is submitted that he has failed to show cause.
20]
The Court is satisfied that his name be
struck from the roll.
21]
The following order is made:
The
draft order marked "X" is made an order of Court.
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT .
I
agree
A
CAJEE ACTING
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NO: 422/2021
HEARD
ON: 24 November 2022
FOR
THE APPLICANT: MR.
L. GROOME
INSTRUCTED
BY: Rooth
& Wessels Attorneys
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: NO
APPEARANCE
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 6 December 2022
[1]
Prokureursorde van Transvaal v Kleynhans
1995 (1) SA 839
(T) at
853G-H; Law Society of the Northern Provinces v Mogami & Others
2010 (1) SA 186
(SCA) at 195-196 par 26
[2]
Prokureursorde van Transvaal v Kleynhans
1995 (1) SA 839
(T) at
853G-H
[3]
Hewetson v Law Society of the Free State
2020 (5) SA 86
(SCA) at par
49
[4]
Hepple v Law Society of the Northern Provinces 2014 JDR 1078 at par
9
[5]
Law Society Cape v Peter
2009 (2) SA 27
(SCA) par 28
[6]
Incorporated Law Society, Transvaal v Visse and Others; Incorporated
Law Society Transvaal v Vi/joen
1958 (4) SA 115
(T) at 1310-G
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