Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 48South Africa
Legal Practice Council v Steffen (13048/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 48 (20 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
20 February 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Legal Practice Council v Steffen (13048/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 48 (20 February 2024)
Legal Practice Council v Steffen (13048/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 48 (20 February 2024)
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sino date 20 February 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
[WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN]
Case no:13048/23
In
the matter between:
THE
LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Applicant
and
HANNO
ERASMUS STEFFEN
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED (VIA EMAIL) ON 20 FEBRUARY 2024
SHER, J (GAMBLE J
concurring):
1.
This
is an unopposed application to strike the respondent from the roll of
legal practitioners.
[1]
The
respondent is an admitted attorney of this Court who practiced as a
director of the incorporated firm H Steffen Inc from premises
in
Brackenfell and Stellenbosch.
2.
It
is trite that the adjudication of an application such as this
involves a threefold enquiry.
[2]
In the first place the Court must determine whether the alleged
misconduct by the respondent has been established on a balance
of
probabilities
.
Thereafter, it must determine whether he is a ‘fit and proper’
person to continue to practise. This requires weighing
up the conduct
complained of against the conduct expected and, as such, involves a
value judgment. Finally, the Court must decide
whether the misconduct
warrants the ultimate sanction of being struck from the roll or
whether an order of suspension from practice
will suffice. The
exercise of discretion is concerned with the second and third parts
of the enquiry.
The
facts
3.
On 25 March 2022 an order was granted by
this Court, at the instance of the Legal Practice Council (‘the
LPC’), suspending
the respondent from practice pending an
investigation into several complaints which it had received and the
outcome of any disciplinary
proceedings.
4.
Subsequently, the respondent was charged
with a single count of the misappropriation of trust funds from the
Fijnbosch Farm Trust
during March 2021, in the amount of R 3 998 860.
He waived his right to a hearing before a disciplinary committee and
pleaded guilty
to the charge.
5.
The theft of just short of R 4 million was
not the only instance of misappropriation in which the respondent
indulged. From the
papers before us it appears that between October
2020 and the end of April 2022 the respondent misappropriated a
further R 3.335
million odd from 8 other hapless victims. Two of
these thefts occurred after he had already been suspended: one within
a matter
of days after the order was granted and the other a month
later.
6.
The misappropriations occurred in respect
of monies which had been paid into the respondent’s trust
account either as the
proceeds of the sales of immovable properties,
in transactions in which he had been appointed as the conveyancer, or
in respect
of transfer fees and duties which had been paid to him for
this purpose.
7.
The respondent’s choice of victims
was indiscriminate and ranged from young married couples to retired
pensioners. His misconduct
was not confined to simple acts of
opportunistic filching. Where there was an opportunity to exploit a
transaction further, he
did not hesitate to do so. His first act of
misappropriation was in respect of the proceeds of the sale of an
immovable property
to the somewhat cynically named ‘Prosper’
Trust, a trust which, unbeknown to the sellers, was an entity of
which the
respondent was a trustee and beneficiary, together with the
estate agent who marketed the property. Without paying over the
purchase
price of R 300 000 to the sellers the respondent and his
colleague onsold the property some 5 days later for twice the value
it
had been bought for i.e. R 600 000 which they pocketed. In similar
vein, when the respondent misappropriated the R 4 million proceeds
of
the sale of farmland which belonged to the Fijnbosch Farm Trust he
pocketed R 521 731 of VAT that was supposed to be paid over
to the
Receiver of revenue.
An
assessment
8.
The respondent has not offered any
explanation for the egregious thefts which he committed over the
period of more than a year.
On the papers before us the inference
which one is driven to is that these were predatory acts motivated
solely by greed and self-enrichment.
Even when he was suspended the
respondent was not dissuaded from continuing to fleece those who had
entrusted him with their monies.
9.
As
members of a ‘distinguished and venerable’ profession,
lawyers occupy an important place in society
and
‘absolute personal integrity and scrupulous honesty’ are
required of them.
[3]
These
fundamental attributes are the bedrock for the trust which members of
the public repose in lawyers. The respondent callously
betrayed that
trust, and his
behaviour is indicative of a complete and utter absence of integrity
and honesty.
10.
He preyed on unsuspecting members of the public and has shown
no remorse or contrition for what he has done. He has made no offer
to recompense any of his victims. In order to protect the public the
respondent must be removed from the roll of legal practitioners.
Hopefully, he will still be prosecuted for the criminal offences he
has committed.
11.
As is customary in such matters, the respondent must be
ordered to bear the costs of the application, on the scale as between
attorney
and client. As the Court which suspended the respondent from
practice also made an order that his firm should be placed under
curatorship
and that he should deliver his certificate of admission
and enrolment to the Registrar, there is no need to make provision
for
this in the order which we will make.
Order
12.
In the result, we make the following order:
12.1
in terms of
s 40(3)(a)(iv)(aa)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
the respondent’s name is struck from the roll of legal
practitioners;
12.2
The respondent shall be liable for the costs of the
application on the scale as between attorney and client.
M
SHER
Judge
of the High Court
PAL
GAMBLE
Judge
of the High Court
[1]
In
terms of
s 44(1)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
.
[2]
Jasat v
Natal Law Society
2000
(3) SA 44
(SCA) para 10;
Summerley
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
2006 (5) SA 613
(SCA) at para 2.
[3]
General
Council of the Bar v Geach
2013
(2) SA 52
(SCA) para 87.
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