Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 412South Africa
South African Legal Practice Council v Gonzales (1949/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 412 (6 December 2024)
Headnotes
in trust on behalf of a client, Mr Andre Myburg, during the period 2022 and 2023; and (b) failed to comply with the applicant’s request for information in terms of rule 40.2.4 of its rules.[1]
Judgment
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## South African Legal Practice Council v Gonzales (1949/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 412 (6 December 2024)
South African Legal Practice Council v Gonzales (1949/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 412 (6 December 2024)
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sino date 6 December 2024
FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION – Striking off –
Misappropriation
of trust funds
–
Client
paid monies for maintenance arrears and fees – Client
settling directly with client but attorney not refunding
client –
Patently false attempt to justify conduct – Claim of
temporary loan agreement with client – Failure
to comply
with LPC’s request for information in terms of Rule 40.2.4
of Legal Practice Rules – Suffered from
severe depression
and had family to support – Insufficient motivation for
suspension with attendant conditions –
Respondent’s
name struck from rolls of attorneys.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
no: 1949/2024
In the matter between:
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Applicant
and
HEINRICH FRANCISCO
GONZALES
Respondent
Coram:
Justice C
Fortuin
et
Justice J Cloete
Heard:
4 December
2024
Delivered
electronically:
6 December 2024
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application
for the striking of the respondent’s name from the roll of
attorneys. In its founding affidavit the
applicant’s deponent,
Ms M Govender, who is its Chairperson of the Western Cape
Provincial Council, advanced two
grounds, namely that prima facie the
respondent (a) misappropriated R73 320.24 held in trust on
behalf of a client, Mr Andre Myburg,
during the period 2022
and 2023; and (b) failed to comply with the applicant’s
request for information in terms of rule
40.2.4 of its rules.
[1]
[2]
The applicant launched this application on 29 January 2024 in
two
parts. Part A, enrolled for hearing on 20 February
2024, was for an order suspending the respondent from practice (with
the customary attendant relief) pending the determination of Part B
for his removal. On 20 February 2024, Gamble J granted
the
Part A relief (which had not been opposed).
[3]
Thereafter Ms Z Surve who is the applicant’s Legal
Officer:
Curatorship Department: Risk and Compliance, filed a
curatorship report as envisaged in paragraph 2.4 of the Gamble J
order. The
report is undated but appears to have been compiled on or
about 15 April 2024. Although no mention had been made in the
applicant’s
founding affidavit of a separate complaint against
the respondent by a Ms Goosen, this was touched on briefly by
Ms Surve
in her report as follows:
‘ •
The
first complaint was lodged by Ms Goosen, who was appointed as the
firm’s external Accountant, and the second complaint
was lodged
by a client of the firm, Mr Myburg;
Both
complaints related to the administration of trust funds…’
[4]
In her supplementary founding affidavit deposed to on 16 May 2024,
Ms Govender,
in dealing with this report, confirmed that no
details were provided by the curator regarding the substance of the
Goosen complaint;
attempts by the curator to contact the respondent
both directly and via his attorney to obtain his trust accounting
records and
client files had been unsuccessful; the respondent had
advised the curator in April 2024 that his firm had been placed in
provisional
liquidation at the instance of a creditor; and that by 14
April 2024 the Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund had not yet received
any claims from the respondent’s clients.
[5]
Ms Govender stated that the applicant’s investigating committee
had received two further complaints against the respondent and she
would ‘
deal briefly with the more serious complaint’
received from Mr Henry Prins (no details were provided in
relation to the other complaint). The Prins complaint was a failure
by the respondent to account to him as a client for how a sum of
R70 000 held in trust had been expended.
[6]
In a further affidavit by a candidate legal practitioner of the
applicant’s
attorneys, Mr A Ngoma, deposed to on 10 July
2024, the latter annexed a document from the respondent dated 3 June
2024
in which he gave his version of the Myburg and Goosen
complaints; did not deal with the Prins complaint other than that he
could
‘
account’
for it once he received a copy
thereof; but then also referred to the complaints of a certain
Mr Marais, a Mr Scott Carpenter
and a Mr Kroutz. Given
that the applicant did not place any reliance on these other three
complaints, they were presumably
not considered by it to be
sufficiently serious to warrant an approach to this court, and I thus
do not deal with them.
[7]
In the same document the respondent stated the following in relation
to
the pending striking-off application:
‘
18.
I believe further litigation and filing of court papers are
unnecessary legal costs and will protract
the finalisation of this
matter.
19.
I will agree to a final order to be struck from the roll of
practicing attorneys and co-operate
with the LPC and Liquidator in
respect of any further investigation relating to client complaints.
20.
I will however reserve the right to respond to the allegations made
on oath by the applicant
should it be necessary in the future.
21.
We can reach a settlement on the application, prepare a draft order,
and approach the court.’
[8]
In an email from the applicant’s attorney to the respondent
dated
7 June 2024 the latter was advised that the applicant
could not consent to a striking-off order since this was a discretion
to be exercised by the court based on the information before it. If
the respondent wished to place facts or information before
the court
he should prepare and deliver formal answering papers; and that the
Prins complaint had been set out in detail in the
supplementary
founding affidavit, which the respondent could deal with when filing
his answering affidavit.
[9]
Part B was enrolled for hearing on 8 November 2024 when it came
before
Goliath AJP. It would appear that the respondent had
filed an eleventh-hour explanatory affidavit (which was deposed to on
6 November 2024). It would also seem that the applicant’s
attorney and the respondent (in person) addressed Goliath
AJP who
then declined to hear the matter and postponed it to 4 December
2024 with a timetable for delivery of heads of argument,
when it was
allocated to us.
The
Myburg complaint
[10]
On 26 September 2023 the applicant received Mr Myburg’s
complaint which is annexed
to its founding affidavit. He stated that
on about 11 January 2022 he appointed the respondent to assist
him in a maintenance
dispute with his former spouse. The respondent
told him to pay the full amount of the maintenance arrears of
R63 320.24 into
his trust account pending a round table meeting
which the respondent would arrange with his former spouse. This was
duly paid by
Mr Myburg on the same day together with R8 000
required by the respondent for a ‘
consultation fee’
.
On 9 June 2022, Mr Myburg paid a further R10 000 to the
respondent at his request as a deposit for the proposed round
table
meeting. The meeting was never arranged by the respondent and
eventually Mr Myburg settled the dispute directly with
his
former spouse.
[11]
On about 30 May 2023, Mr Myburg instructed the respondent to
refund him. The respondent
offered to repay this in four weekly
instalments commencing on 5 June 2023. Mr Myburg accepted this
arrangement since the
respondent told him that he did not have the
funds in his trust account. However the respondent failed to make
payment as agreed
and did not respond to Mr Myburg’s
messages thereafter. In the 3 June 2024 document sent by the
respondent to the
applicant’s attorneys, he claimed that during
‘
the middle part of 2023’
his firm started to
experience financial constraints. On his own version this was more
than a year after the bulk of the monies
were paid to him by
Mr Myburg. The respondent confirmed he had received those
payments. He alleged however that R63 320.24
was paid by
Mr Myburg into his trust account ‘
as a form of security
in respect of his pending litigation. With Mr Myburg’s written
confirmation and agreement the amount
was transferred from trust to
business, with repayment terms. According to my understanding, this
was a temporary loan agreement
between myself and the client.
Unfortunately, due to unforeseen circumstances, repayment of the
amount took longer than anticipated’
but Mr Myburg was
refunded ‘
in full’
on 30 November 2023.
Although the respondent made reference to annexures in his document
these are not before us, but I will
deal with those annexed to his
later explanatory affidavit.
[12]
The respondent’s statement of account to Mr Myburg annexed
as “K”
to the explanatory affidavit reflects that only
R61 595.24 was purportedly refunded to Mr Myburg, not on
30 November
2023 but on 31 May 2023, i.e. about 4 months
before Mr Myburg lodged his complaint with the applicant, and about 6
months
prior to the alleged repayment. The actual proof of refund,
not of the full amount, but of R63 320.24 dated 30 November
2023, is annexure “M” to the affidavit.
[13]
The respondent could not, as he later claimed, have concluded a
‘
temporary loan agreement’
with Mr Myburg
prior to 30 May 2023 when the latter first demanded repayment.
By that date Mr Myburg’s monies
had already been
transferred by the respondent without Mr Myburg’s
permission from his trust account to his business
account and
utilised by the respondent. This is theft of trust monies which is
one of the most serious offences a legal practitioner
can commit. It
is made worse by the respondent’s patently false attempt to
justify his conduct
ex post facto
.
[14]
It therefore does not assist him to rely on the statement in his
document that ‘
in hindsight, I should’ve refrained
from concluding a loan agreement with the client and [this] was a bad
judgment mistake’
; nor does it assist him (in fact it makes
it worse) to claim, as he did in his explanatory affidavit, that ‘
at
the time I was unaware it is not permissible to enter into a loan
agreement with a client. It was only after proceedings were
initiated
by the applicant’s office that I consulted with an advocate and
learned that my actions were not in line with the
rules of the Legal
Practice Council’
. His other allegation in his explanatory
affidavit that ‘
I am very bad with office administration and
should rather focus on practising law instead of running my own
practice’
only serves to highlight the respondent’s
shortcomings.
[15]
The respondent also claimed in both his document and explanatory
affidavit that the payments
by Mr Myburg of R8 000 and
R10 000 respectively were appropriated to fees for work done ‘
as
per attached statements’
. These statements were not however
attached and we are left in the dark as to how the respondent racked
up attendances for a bill
of R18 000 when, apart from an initial
consultation for which he seemingly charged R8 000 in a simple
matter, on Mr Myburg’s
uncontested version the respondent
did no other work at all. Against this background it is also
startling that the respondent initially
wished to deduct a ‘
yearly
admin fee for managing client security deposit’
of R1 725
before refunding Mr Myburg (which is also evident from annexure
“K”) although the later proof of
payment (annexure “M”)
excluded this.
[16]
In short therefore the respondent not only stole trust monies but
attempted to mislead
both the applicant and the court to evade
responsibility. That at the time of the so-called loan agreement he
was practising for
his own account while seemingly oblivious to the
prohibition on loaning money from a client is also serious. As
custodian of the
profession we are obliged to take these factors into
account in determining an appropriate sanction.
The
failure to comply with the applicant’s request for information
in terms of rule 40.2.4 of the Legal Practice Rules
[17]
Rule 40 reads in relevant part as follows:
‘
40.
Investigation
of alleged misconduct
40.1
When a complaint or allegation of misconduct against the respondent
is referred to the investigating committee, that committee must
investigate the complaint or allegation or cause the complaint
or
allegation to be investigated by the legal officer or by a legal
practitioner appointed by the Council for that purpose.
40.2
For purposes of carrying out its responsibilities in terms of rule
40.1 the investigating committee may:…
40.2.4
by notice in writing require the respondent, or any employee of the
respondent,
to produce to the investigating committee at a time and
place stipulated in the notice, any information relating to the
complaint
including, but not limited to, files, statements,
correspondence, accounting records or other documents which are in
the possession
of or under the control of the respondent or that
other person and which relate to the subject matter of the
complaint;…’
[18]
On 17 October 2023 the applicant addressed a letter to the respondent
informing him of
the Myburg complaint. Included in that letter was a
request for a detailed response ‘
supported, where
appropriate, by copies of documents and relevant accounting records’.
The respondent was given a deadline of 24 October 2023, failing
which the matter would be referred to an investigating committee
for
consideration. In a follow-up email of 24 October 2023, Ms Surve
confirmed her telephone conversation with the respondent
wherein he
had agreed to avail himself for the inspection with the investigative
committee of the applicant. Ms Surve’s email
recorded that: ‘
I
confirm that writer requested your urgent availability and you
advised that you were in the process of moving premises and would
contact the writer with confirmation to arrange a date within the
next week’.
On the same date the respondent sent an email
to Ms Surve confirming that he was in the process of relocating
his office to
Dwarskersbos on the West Coast; that all his records,
documentation and files were already packed up and in transit; but
that he
would gladly co-operate with an inspection and investigation
and suggested that it be held on 10 November 2023. This was
followed
by a formal notice dated 7 November 2023 from the
applicant to the respondent in terms of rule 40.2.4 in relation to
the information
and documentation required.
[19]
A mere two days later, on 9 November 2023, the respondent
informed the applicant by
email that he had decided to close his firm
and would respond to various complaints lodged against him. What he
also stated in
that email is that he had accepted alternative
employment; would be returning to the ‘
corporate sphere’
;
and that in order to ‘
wind up any last strings, I will
respond to all the baseless complaints hereunder by end of November
2023 in writing’.
One of those ‘
baseless
complaints’
was that of Mr Myburg as is evident from
the applicant’s email to the respondent of 7 November 2023
thereunder.
[20]
On 14 November 2023 the applicant informed the respondent by email
that notwithstanding
his decision to close his firm, he was still
required to produce the following information: (a) trust
reconciliations together
with trust bank statements as at 28 February
2022, 28 February 2023 and 31 October 2023; and (b) the
trust
creditors’ ledgers and all information in respect of the
complaints lodged by Ms Goosen, Mr Myburg, Mr Carpenter
and Mr Marais. The respondent simply failed to reply, despite
several follow-ups by the applicant. Accordingly during December
2023
the matter was referred to an investigating committee for urgent
consideration.
[21]
On 1 and 4 December 2023 the investigating committee recommended that
the matter be referred:
(a) for adjudication by a disciplinary
committee; and (b) to the Western Cape Provincial Council for
authorisation of
an urgent application to suspend the respondent from
practising as an attorney, inclusive of a curatorship order, pending
the finalisation
of a disciplinary hearing into the matter. Although
on the papers before us there is no evidence that a disciplinary
hearing ever
took place, the Gamble J order was not made conditional
upon the respondent being suspended from practice pending the outcome
of
such a hearing, and in relation to Part B, that order called upon
the respondent to show cause why his name should not be struck
from
the roll of legal practitioners.
[22]
I have already referred to the report of the curator which confirmed
that her attempts
subsequent to her appointment to contact the
respondent both directly and via his attorney to obtain his trust
accounting records
and client files had been unsuccessful; and that
the respondent advised her in April 2024 that his firm had been
placed in provisional
liquidation.
[23]
The first formal response seemingly received by the applicant from
the respondent was his
document dated 3 June 2024. The reasons he
gave therein for failing to comply with the applicant’s rule
40.2.4 requirements
were the financial constraints experienced from
mid-2023 and the subsequent eviction of him and his family from their
home. He
stated ‘
the above mentioned are the reasons for me
not attending to enquiries by your office during the last part of
2023 or availing myself
to onsite inspections’.
These
reasons only need be stated to be rejected, given that they had
nothing to do with the respondent’s failure to comply
with rule
40.2.4.
[24]
In addition, contrary to the respondent’s earlier communication
that he had ceased
practising and would be returning to the
‘
corporate sphere’
, he disclosed that he had in
fact joined a firm of attorneys in Malmesbury as a ‘
consulting
attorney’
and transferred most of his client files to that
firm. It was only as result of the urgent application which served
before Gamble
J that the firm terminated his employment. He also then
attempted to lay blame on another set of attorneys who he allegedly
appointed
during February 2024 to assist him with the applicant’s
investigation and – importantly – claimed to have
provided
that firm with ‘
records, information and contents
of client files to address some of your office’s queries.
Unfortunately I have learned that
[they]
failed, alternatively
neglected to forward these documents to yourself. Therefor I have
decided to correspond with your office directly
to expedite the
process’.
He made allegations in similar vein in his
subsequent explanatory affidavit.
[25]
On his own version the respondent misled the applicant when he
informed it he was returning
to the ‘
corporate sphere’
in the full knowledge of a pending investigation against him relating
to mismanagement of trust funds. He had no intention of doing
so at
the time. Instead he obtained employment at another firm of attorneys
and transferred most of his client files there. There
was nothing to
prevent him from making his records and files available to the
applicant once these reached their destination (from
Paarl to
Malmesbury) given his representation to the applicant that they were
all ‘
in transit’
. That many of these records were
indeed available is borne out by the respondent’s subsequent
allegations in both his document
and explanatory affidavit that they
were handed over to another firm of attorneys to make them available
to the applicant’s
attorneys. Also disturbing is the
respondent’s stance in October/November 2023 that Mr Myburg’s
complaint (amongst
others) was baseless. This all demonstrates that
the respondent lacks the required degree of professionalism and
integrity to practice
as an attorney.
The
Prins complaint
[26]
Mr Prins lodged a complaint with the applicant in which he stated
that on 23 November
2021 and 14 December 2021, he made two
deposits into the respondent’s trust account of R38 030.50
and R100 000
respectively. The purpose was for the respondent to
represent Mr Prins in the High Court in a dispute pertaining to
his late
father’s estate. The first payment was made in
settlement of the respondent’s invoice of 8 November 2021;
the
second payment of R100 000 was ostensibly made as a further
deposit to the respondent for anticipated future legal services.
[27]
On 1 February 2022, 29 March 2022 and 25 July 2022, Mr
Prins repeatedly requested
the respondent to account to him for work
done. On 7 February 2023 the respondent finally reverted to
Mr Prins, annexing
the statement of account of his local Cape
Town correspondent with a balance due of R68 864.94. The
respondent advised Mr Prins
that he had previously (on
16 January 2022) paid R30 000 to the correspondent from
funds which he held in trust (i.e. the
R100 000 deposit of
14 December 2021), but that Mr Prins had to make
arrangements for payment of the balance of
R68 864.94. According
to the applicant, that explained what became of the sum of R30 000
but as far as the balance of
the deposit is concerned, amounting to
R70 000, the respondent had simply failed to account to Mr Prins
despite a further
email from Mr Prins to him dated 1 June
2023.
[28]
In terms of clause 3.8 of
the code of conduct for legal practitioners
[2]
a legal practitioner shall:
‘
account
faithfully, accurately and timeously for any of their clients’
money which comes into their possession, keep such
money separate
from their own money, and retain such money for so long only as is
strictly necessary.’
[29]
In terms of clause 13.1 of the code any breach thereof constitutes
misconduct. The applicant
alleged that despite what happened to the
balance of the deposit being peculiarly within the respondent’s
knowledge, he had
failed, despite several requests, to account for
these funds.
[30]
In his explanatory affidavit the respondent acknowledged that he had
failed to account
properly to Mr Prins. For the first time he annexed
what appears to be a printout of his business account ledger spanning
the period
2 November 2021 to 31 May 2022, and a 5 page
invoice only dated 9 October 2023 but covering the period 28 October
2021 to 30 May 2022. The respondent also alleged that ‘
at
present, I am unable to fully investigate the matter due to
restricted access to Lexpro, which I am currently working to restore
with the assistance of the liquidator. Once my access is fully
reinstated, I will conduct a thorough review of the matter. If it
is
found that an accounting error was made, I will take immediate steps
to rectify the issue and, if necessary, arrange for any
refund owed
to Mr Prins. Based on my initial investigation, it appears that
the issue was likely a clerical error related
to the posting of
accounts, and not a case of misappropriation of trust funds.’
The point is that despite the elapse of more than a year, the
respondent has only been able to conduct what he refers to as an
‘
initial investigation’
; and on his version he is
currently destitute. Accordingly, this is cold comfort for Mr Prins.
Discussion
[31]
The applicant is the
successor-in-title to the erstwhile Cape Law Society, a juristic
entity established in terms of s 56(a)(i)
of the now repealed
Attorneys Act
[3]
(“the
Attorneys Act”) and which served as the regulatory body for
legal practitioners in the Western Cape. In
terms of s 114 of the
Legal Practice Act
[4]
(“the
LPA”) every attorney and conveyancer admitted by the High Court
and authorised to be enrolled as such in terms
of the Attorneys Act
prior to 1 November 2018 is regarded as having been admitted to
practice in terms of the LPA. The applicant
is statutorily enjoined,
in terms of s 5 of the LPA, to regulate all legal practitioners and
to enhance and maintain the integrity
and status of the legal
profession.
[32]
The respondent was admitted as an attorney of the Northern Cape
Division of the High Court
on 16 April 2014; was enrolled as an
attorney of this court on 8 December 2017 and such with the
applicant; and at the time
of the complaints giving rise to this
application had been practising as sole director of HFG Attorneys Inc
since 1 March 2018.
[33]
Section 22(1)(d) of the Attorneys Act provided as follows:
‘
22.
Removal of attorneys from roll.
–
(1)
Any person who has been admitted and enrolled as an attorney may on
application by the society concerned be struck off the roll
or
suspended from practice by the court within the jurisdiction of which
he or she practises—
…
(d)
if he, in the discretion of the court, is not a fit and proper person
to continue to practise
as an attorney.’
[34]
The LPA does not contain a provision similar to s 22(1)(d) of the
Attorneys Act. However
s 44(1) of the LPA provides that the LPA does
not in any way derogate from the power of the High Court to
adjudicate upon and make
orders in respect of matters concerning the
conduct of a legal practitioner, candidate legal practitioner or
juristic entity.
[35]
Accordingly, the underlying principle espoused by s 22(1)(d) of the
Attorneys Act, i.e.
that a practitioner may be struck from the roll
if he or she is no longer “fit and proper” remains
applicable. In any
event, notwithstanding the repeal of the Attorneys
Act, both the common law and s 44 of the LPA vest the Court with the
necessary
jurisdiction to hear striking applications and to determine
if the respondent is a fit and proper person to remain on the roll of
attorneys.
[36]
The approach to the
exercise of the court’s discretion in a matter such as this is
settled law: see,
inter
alia
,
Jasat v
Natal Law Society
[5]
;
and
Malan
& Another v Law Society Northern Provinces.
[6]
It is a three-stage enquiry. The first is whether the conduct
complained of has been established on a balance of probabilities.
This is a factual enquiry. It is clearly established in the present
case. The second stage, which is a discretionary evaluation,
necessarily calls for the conduct complained of to be weighed against
the standard of the profession, which is partly value judgment
and
partly objective fact. The respondent is guilty of theft of trust
funds, misleading his client Mr Myburg as well as the applicant
and
this court; and is oblivious to his professional duties in
administering trust monies as the evidence before us has shown.
[37]
The third and final stage
of the enquiry is whether the delinquent practitioner should be
struck from the roll or suspended. Again,
this involves the exercise
of a discretion. As was stated by Rogers J in
The
Cape Law Society v Du Toit
:
[7]
‘
Prima facie
striking
off is the appropriate sanction for the protracted dishonesty of
which the respondent had been guilty. Suspension reflects
a view that
the person is likely to be rehabilitated after a period but
suspension on its own will seldom bring this about –
there will
usually be a need for ancillary conditions directed at aiding the
process of rehabilitation. It is for the delinquent
attorney who
seeks the lesser sanction of suspension to place the Court in a
position to formulate appropriate conditions (see
Malan
supra
paras
[7]-[10]). The respondent has placed nothing before us to suggest
that suspension would be appropriate…’
[38]
The respondent is indeed still relatively young (he is 36 years old).
I will accept in
his favour that he suffered from severe depression
which he has now taken steps to address. He pleads for a second
chance in the
form of a suspension and has annexed two references
from individuals as to his alleged good character. He also has a
family to
support. All these are mitigating factors.
[39]
However on careful consideration of the evidence I am unpersuaded
that the respondent has
a true appreciation of his character defects.
That being the case, one cannot be reassured that he will in future
act in accordance
with such an appreciation. He has also not placed
anything before the court to enable it to formulate appropriate
conditions even
if minded to impose a suspension. There is simply not
enough to show that a suspension with attendant conditions will have
the
desired result. At present the respondent is regrettably a threat
to any potential client, given his track record of maladministration;
but he has also brought the profession into disrepute. It is of the
utmost importance that the public is able to rely on the
trustworthiness
and absolute integrity of members of the legal
profession.
[40]
I thus propose the following order:
1.
The respondent’s name is struck from the rolls of attorneys;
2.
The respondent shall surrender and deliver to the Registrar of
this Court his certificate of enrolment as an attorney;
3.
In the event of the respondent failing to comply with the
provisions of paragraph 2 above within one (1) week from date of
service
of this order by email from the applicant’s attorney,
the Sheriff is authorised and directed to take possession thereof and
deliver same to the Registrar; and
4.
The respondent shall pay the costs of this application on the
scale as between attorney and client.
J I CLOETE
FORTUIN
J
I
agree and it is so ordered.
C M FORTUIN
For
the applicant
: Mr H Von Lieres,
Instructed
by
: Von Lieres Cooper Barlow (Aviwe Ngoma)
For
the respondent
: In person
[1]
Promulgated in terms of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of
2014
.
[2]
Published in GN 168, GG 42337 of 29 March 2019.
[3]
No. 56 of 1979.
[4]
fn 1 above.
[5]
2000 (3) SA 44 (SCA).
[6]
[2008] ZASCA 90
;
2009 (1) SA 216
(SCA).
[7]
Unreported decision in this Division under case no.
553/16 of 10 February 2017.
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