Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 71South Africa
South African Legal Practice Council v Rencken (Reasons) (24020/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 71 (14 February 2025)
Headnotes
First National Bank (“FNB”), has despite numerous queries from the respondent not been able to explain the delay. It has therefore referred the matter to the
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## South African Legal Practice Council v Rencken (Reasons) (24020/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 71 (14 February 2025)
South African Legal Practice Council v Rencken (Reasons) (24020/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 71 (14 February 2025)
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sino date 14 February 2025
FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION
– Suspension –
Interim
interdict
–
Errors
in trust account management – Payment incorrectly made to
wrong client – Admitted error – Investigated
and
recovered funds – Paid full amount to correct clients
thereafter – Resulted in finalization of their matter
–
No evidence of intentional misappropriation or personal gain –
LPC had not fully investigated matter or engaged
in constructive
discussions – Interim interdictory relief sought by LPC –
Failed to demonstrate prima facie case
– Application
dismissed.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case number: 24020/2024
In the matter between:
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Applicant
and
MARI
RENCKEN
Respondent
REASONS DELIVERED ON
14 FEBRUARY 2025
VAN
ZYL AJ
:
Introduction
1.
On 17 January 2025 I granted an order in the
following terms after considering Part A of a two-part application:
1.1.
The respondent’s application to strike out
is dismissed.
1.2.
Part A of the main application is dismissed.
1.3.
Each party shall be liable for its or her own
costs of suit.
2.
These are the reasons for the order.
Background
3.
The applicant (“the LPC”) is the body
regulating the conduct of legal practitioners admitted to practice
under the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
. The respondent is a
practicing attorney and conveyancer in Somerset West, having been
admitted as an attorney in 2001 and
as a conveyancer during 2007.
4.
The
LPC instituted an application for interim interdictory relief
[1]
(as Part A) pending the hearing of an application for final relief
(as Part B) entailing the striking of the respondent’s
name
from the roll of legal practitioners. Part A sought an order
that the respondent be suspended from her practice as a
legal
practitioner of this Court, and that a curator
bonis
be
appointed to control and administer the respondent's trust account
during the period of her suspension. The application
was
brought on the basis of two allegations, namely, first, that the
respondent’s trust account was in debit on 16 September
2024,
and, second, the respondent’s alleged misappropriation of trust
funds from such account in the amount of R350 000,00.
5.
The respondent, a sole practitioner, opposed the
application.
6.
The facts giving rise to these proceedings were,
briefly, as follows. During April 2024 the respondent was
instructed by Mr
and Mrs Adonis to act as conveyancer and to transfer
their property in Strand to Mr and Mrs Dlakadlaka, the property
having been
sold for the price of R350 000.00.
7.
On 3 May 2024, pursuant to the sale, Mr Dlakadlaka
paid R35 000,00 into the respondent’s trust account. On
13 September
2024 he made a further payment of R311 000,00. The
transfer of the property was registered in the names of Mr and Mrs
Dlakadlaka
on 16 September 2024.
8.
The respondent failed to pay the purchase price of
R350 000,00 to Mr and Mrs Adonis on transfer of the property. This
caused the
Adonisse to make various requests for payment, culminating
in a request from their daughter, who addressed whatsapp
correspondence
to the respondent enquiring about the payment of the
purchase price. In a further attempt to receive payment, Mr and
Mrs
Adonis instructed an attorney who addressed correspondence to the
respondent on 26 September 2024 and 16 October 2024. The respondent
failed to make payment, despite these demands.
9.
On 3 October 2024 the LPC received a formal
complaint from Mr and Mrs Adonis. which resulted in the institution
of these proceedings.
The trust debit
10.
The LPC argues that there are various
inconsistencies in the respondent’s explanation, and that her
version changed in the
various supplementary answering affidavits
delivered. I do not intend to go into the details of these
inconsistencies, which
are admittedly present. They appear to
be the result of an increasingly better consideration of the
available documentation
over the course of preparation for the
hearing and the gathering of more information. What it comes
down to is that it appears,
as the LPC argued, that the respondent
did not treat separate clients' funds separately. Instead, she
treated the funds in
her trust account as a composite whole from
which she debited as and when required.
11.
Essentially, the respondent’s explanation –
viewed holistically upon a consideration of all of the affidavits -
boils
down to the following. The respondent admits that her
trust bank account was in debit on 16 September 2024 in the amount of
R170 012,00 after the payment of transfer duty in a property transfer
matter to the South African Revenue Service (“SARS”)
on
that day.
12.
The debit lasted, however, only until funds paid
into the trust account on the previous day, 15 September 2024, were
credited to
the account on 16 September 2024. The bank at which
the trust account is held, First National Bank (“FNB”),
has
despite numerous queries from the respondent not been able to
explain the delay. It has therefore referred the matter to the
online banking department to explain why the payments made on 15
September 2024 (and which were shown in the respondent's account
on
that day) were only allocated after the payment of the transfer duty
made to SARS on 16 September 2024.
13.
It appears from the papers that the respondent did
not foresee a debit in her trust account. The immediate
transfers into
the account reflected on 15 September 2024 as having
been received, and the respondent thought that the money was there.
They were, however, only in reverse allocated on 16 September 2024
after the respondent had paid transfer duty to SARS. This
caused the debit. The business manager of the FNB branch in Somerset
West could not explain why this occurred, and referred the
matter to
the FNB online banking department for investigation. Unfortunately,
the FNB head office and its legal department have
not yet provided a
report.
14.
An issue that was pointed out in the replying
affidavit is the fact that the name of the respondent’s
husband, instead of
the respondent, appears on the bank notification
of payment of R350 000,00 to Mr Adonis
.
Although this did not form part of the
case made out in the founding affidavit, the respondent addressed
this aspect in a supplementary
answering affidavit. She
indicating that she had raised the issue with FNB, who has not yet
explained the error. This
respondent’s husband is not
involved in her practice. The respondent denies that the
inclusion of her husband’s
name on this documentation was her
doing – it appears to have been a glitch at FNB. This has
also been referred to
the online banking and client services
departments, who are yet to provide answers.
The alleged
misappropriation of R350 000,00
15.
After receipt of the Adonisse’s query, the
respondent investigated the situation and discovered that three
payments made to
another client, Mr Jacobs, on 23 August 2024, 2
September 2024, and 4 September 2024 from her trust account in the
total amount
of R350 000.00 had been made in error. The
respondent was doing work for Mr Jabobs at the time and thought, in
error, that
R350 000,00 of the funds that had come into her trust
account was in respect of his transaction and thus owing to him.
Mr
Jacobs confirmed the fact of the incorrect payments under oath,
and confirmed further that he had reimbursed the respondent on 31
October 2024 after the she had made several requests to him.
16.
On 1 November 2024 the respondent paid the full
amount of R350 000,00 from her trust account to Mr and Mrs Adonis,
which resulted
in the finalization of their matter.
17.
According to the Oxford Advanced Learner's
Dictionary, misappropriation means “
taking
someone else's property or money for oneself, especially when they
have trusted you to take care of it
”
.
This is not what happened in the present case.
I
accept that the respondent committed an error (a rather negligent
one) in informing Mr Jacobs of the availability of funds and
inaccurately disbursing payments to him. There is no indication that
she appropriated any funds for personal gain or any other
purpose.
Mr Jacobs subsequently confirmed the mistake, and reimbursed the
respondent. The reimbursed funds were forthwith
paid over Mr and Mrs
Adonis. Neither the respondent nor any other person
benefited from these events, and there was
no eventual substantial
loss to any client or party.
18.
This matter does not involve a misappropriation of
trust funds in the true sense. The money paid to the respondent ended
up where
it should have been. The problem is how she accounted for
the movement of the money. There is no suggestion of theft.
19.
It is unfortunate that the error was rectified
only about one and a half months after the Adonis transfer had been
registered.
The respondent clearly should have communicated the
situation to the Adonisse immediately upon discovery of her error.
It
appears from the papers that she did attempt repeatedly to obtain
repayment from Mr Jacobs, who eventually reimbursed her only on
31
October 2024. I get the impression that the respondent
inadvisedly waited for a response from Mr Jacobs before she
confronted
the problem by interacting with the Adonisse. Perhaps she
felt embarrassed at the time. Whatever the explanation, this is not a
satisfactory situation. In addition, the internal
administration by FNB of the trust account over that time should be
investigated,
as well as the fact that the respondent made erroneous
payments to Mr Jacobs and did not pay the requisite attention to the
proper
administration of her trust account.
20.
I think that the respondent has explaining to do
as regards the administration of her trust account (and in this
respect she is
to act diligently and promptly in relation to requests
from the LPC for information), as well as to the fact that she did
not respond
promptly to the Adonisse when they queried the
non-receipt of their funds. It is not acceptable that they were
compelled
to instruct an attorney and address a complaint to the LPC
before they received an explanation. The respondent further
needs
to provide the LPC with a detailed reconciliation of her trust
account for the period in which the events complained of in the
founding papers occurred, in particular April 2024 to November 2024.
21.
I
agree wholeheartedly with the LPC that the legal profession is, and
should be seen to be, an honourable profession that demands
high
ethical standards, including complete honesty and integrity, from its
members.
[2]
Yet, I do not regard
an interdict of the drastic nature sought by the LPC as warranted at
this stage without a fuller picture of
the respondent's trust account
affairs. Unlike in a standard case of theft or another plainly
unlawful misappropriation,
it is not clear to me, even of a
prima
facie
basis,
that such misconduct as appears from the papers would eventually
warrant the striking-off of the respondent’s name
from the roll
of attorneys.
22.
The
respondent still faces disciplinary sanction, up to and perhaps
including an order that she be stuck off. There is a need, however,
to explore her conduct so as to determine her level of culpability,
and ultimately to formulate the appropriate sanction.
Chapter 4
of the
Legal Practice Act arms
the LPC with a variety of statutory
powers to investigate and discipline legal practitioners, and to
determine the extent of their
culpability.
Section 37(3)
(a)
of the
Act, for example, authorises the LPC to establish a disciplinary
committee to oversee “
misconduct
proceedings
”
if
“
prima
facie evidence
”
of
misconduct is found. It has been held that where the material facts
underlying any allegation of misconduct that may lead to
striking-off
(or, as in the present case, a suspension) are contested or obscure,
the exercise of these powers will normally be
a necessary step before
approaching the court.
[3]
This will, of course, depend upon the facts of each case.
23.
The respondent in the present matter argues that
the LPC should have engaged these statutory powers before seeking her
suspension
on the stringent terms sought. From the papers it
appears that there was one attempt from the LPC to call and speak to
the
respondent. The respondent could not take the call at the
time because she was being admitted to hospital after a suspected
heart attack. The rest of the communication between the parties
was by way of written correspondence. There was not
yet any
serious attempt to meet and discuss the situation in a constructive
manner, and in particular to discuss the relevant course
of events in
detail at the hand of the available records. On a consideration
of the particular facts of this case, I agree
with the respondent’s
submission. The LPC has adequate powers to refer what it
regards as
prima facie
misconduct to a disciplinary committee, which may
then recommend that the LPC seek striking-off relief after a full
hearing.
From the facts currently on record there does not
appear to be a risk to the public in the respondent’s continued
administration
of her trust account to the extent that her suspension
from practice is warranted.
24.
In all
of these circumstances, and in the exercise of my discretion, I was
of the view that the interim interdictory relief sought
should not be
granted.
[4]
There are too
many unanswered questions that could have been and can be dealt with
between the parties, and a concerted effort
needs to be made by both
of them to discuss the matter in a constructive manner, which could
of course include the appropriate
disciplinary procedures.
The striking-out
application
25.
The respondent complained that the applicant’s
supplementary replying affidavit contained matter that was new, and
applied
for such matter to be struck out.
26.
On a
consideration of the allegations in the replying affidavit, however,
I was of the view that they constituted comment on the
averments set
out in the further supplementary answering affidavit, and did not
serve to expand the ambit of the complaint set
out in the founding
affidavit. They also, in several instances, consisted of
argument that was duly addressed by counsel
in the course of the
hearing. I did not regard these replies to have caused
prejudice
[5]
to the respondent,
and accordingly refused the application to strike out.
Costs
27.
As the
LPC was litigating in an official capacity in the exercise of its
duties and obligations under the
Legal Practice Act, it
should
generally not be mulcted in costs.
[6]
Whilst the respondent’s striking-out application was dismissed,
she was successful in the main application. In
the
circumstances, I though it fair to direct that each party should pay
their own costs of suit.
Order
28.
I accordingly granted an order as set out in the
introduction to these reasons.
VAN ZYL AJ
Appearances:
For
the applicant:
Ms Z. Titus, instructed by Abrahams Kiewitz
Attorneys
For
the respondent:
Mr J. Crouse, instructed by Rencken Attorneys
[1]
Under
sections 43
and
89
of the
Legal Practice Act, read
with the relevant
regulations promulgated under
section 109
of the Act.
[2]
See,
for example,
Swartzberg
v Law Society of Northern Provinces
[2008] ZASCA 36
;
2008
(5) SA 322
(SCA) at para
[18]
.
[3]
Legal
Practice Council v Louw and others
2025
(1) SA 447
(GJ) at para [12].
[4]
Networking
Technologies v System Publishers (Pty) Ltd
[1996] ZASCA 107
;
1997
(1) SA 391
(A) at 399A.
[5]
University
of the Free State v Afriforum
2017
(4) SA 283
(SCA) at 296E-F.
[6]
See,
for example,
Law
Society of the Northern Provinces v Dube
[2012]
4 All SA 251
(SCA) para [33].
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