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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## South African Legal Practice Council and Another v Nonxuba and Others (10313/2021)
[2022] ZAWCHC 105 (18 April 2022)
South African Legal Practice Council and Another v Nonxuba and Others (10313/2021)
[2022] ZAWCHC 105 (18 April 2022)
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sino date 18 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE
DIVISION,
CAPE
TOWN)
Case
No: 10313/2021
In
the matter between:
THE
SOUTH
AFRICAN
LEGAL
PRACTICE
COUNCIL
1
st
Applicant
MEC
FOR THE EXECUTIVE
COUNCIL FOR HEALTH
2
nd
Applicant
OF
THE WESTERN CAPE
PROVINCIAL
DEPARTMENT
and
ZUKO
MACK MICHAEL NONXUBA
1
st
Respondent
NONXUBA
INC.
2
nd
Respondent
NOMVELWANA
ALICIA
LITHEMBA
NONXUBA
3
rd
Respondent
Date
of hearing : 11 April
2022
Date
of Judgment
:
18
April
2022
JUDGMENT
NUKU,
J
[1]
This is an application by the South
African Legal Practice Council
('the LPC')
to suspend Mr Zuko Mack Michael Nonxuba
(“Mr
Nonxuba")
as a practising
attorney pending the final determination of an application to strike
his name off the roll of legal practitioners.
[2]
The matter started off as an urgent
application which was brought by
the LPC on 21 June 2021 for an order interdicting Mr Nonxuba from
practising as a legal practitioner
pending the final determination of
disciplinary proceedings launched by the LPC against Mr Nonxuba. For
ease of reference I refer
to this application as the main
application.
[3]
The main application was prompted by
some investigations conducted by
the LPC which suggested that Mr Nonxuba might be guilty of
professional misconduct. These investigations
traversed some material
which might breach professional legal privilege enjoyed by Mr
Nonxuba's clients. For this reason, the LPC
obtained an order that
was granted by Rogers J which provides that what the investigations
revealed must be kept confidentiaI.
[4]
Mr Nonxuba opposed· the main
application, filed opposing
papers and the main application was set down for hearing on 10 August
2021. On 3 August 2021, the LPC
received an application by the Member
for the Executive Council for Health of the Western Cape Provincial
Government
('the MEC')
to intervene in the main
application. For convenience I refer to the application by the MEC as
the intervention application.
[5]
The affidavit filed in support of the.
intervention application
revealed that Nonxuba Incorporated, the law firm where Mr Nonxuba
practises as a director, had successfully
prosecuted five medical
negligence claims involving minor children against the Member for the
Executive Council for. Health of
the Eastern Cape Provincial
Government
('the MEC, EC')
which resulted in the
following court orders being granted, namely:
5.1
a court order dated 28 May 2018 where the MEC, EC was ordered to pay
the plaintiff:
5.1.1 R300 000 in respect of general
damages;
5.1.2 .R14.7 million on behalf of a
minor child;
5.1.3 R1 102 500 in respect of the
costs for the administration of a trust to be established for the
benefit of a minor child
5.1.4 Plaintiff's costs of suit.
5.2
a court order dated 6 August 2018 where the MEC, EC was ordered to
pay the plaintiff:·
5.2.1 R350 000 in respect of general
damages;
5.2.2 R17 555 350 on behalf of a minor
child;
5.2.3 R1 316 651.25 in respect of the
costs for the administration of a trust to be established for the
benefit of a minor child
5.2.4 Plaintiffs costs of suit.
5.3
a court order dated 29 March 2019 where the MEC, EC was ordered to
pay the plaintiff:
5.3.1 R7 441 860.47 on behalf of a
minor child;
5.3.2 R558 139.53 in respect of the
costs for the administration of a trust to be established for the
benefit of a minor child
5.3.3 Plaintiff's costs of suit.
5.4
a court order dated 6 August 2018 where the MEC, EC was ordered to
pay the·
plaintiff:
5.4.1 R350 000 in respect of general
damages;
5.4.2 R15 215 016.90 on behalf of a
minor child;
5.4.3 R1 570 870.28 in respect of the
costs for the administration of a trust to be established for the
benefit of a minor child
5.4.4 Plaintiff's costs of suit.
5.5
a court order dated 6 August 2018 where the MEC, EC was ordered to
pay the plaintiff:
5.5.1 R350 000 in respect of general
damages;
5.5.2 R9 846 319 on behalf of a minor
child and costs for the administration of a trust to be established
for the benefit of a minor
child
5.5.3 Plaintiffs costs of suit.
[5]
In addition to the amounts referred to in 5.4 and 5.5 above, the MEC,
EC had paid RS.5 million and RS million respectively to the trust
account of Nonxuba Incorporated. All the five court orders referred
to above obliged Nonxuba incorporated to establish the trusts for the
benefit of the minor children within a period of six months
from the
date of the order.
[6]
In three matters where trusts were established after a period way in
excess
of six months, Nonxuba Incorporated had failed to pay over the
monies to the trusts. In two matters no trusts were established,
although in one of these matters the monies were transferred to
another law firm after the termination of the mandate of Nonxuba
Incorporated.
[7]
The above facts greatly concerned the LPC and caused it to approach
this
Court on an urgent basis seeking an order interdicting Mr
Nonxuba and all others persons authorised to operate upon the trust
accounts
kept by Nonxuba Incorporated from operating such trust
accounts, as well as an order appointing the Director of the Gauteng
office
of the LPC
as a
curator to the said trust accounts,
with the authority to operate them until Mr Nonxuba or Nonxuba
Incorporated had, to the satisfaction
of the LPC:
7.1
proved the date upon which the funds payable in
terms of the
court
or
d
ers referred to above were
received by Nonxuba Incorporated;
7.2
proved that the amounts so paid were correctly credited to the
relevant trust
ledger accounts and to provide the LPC with copies
thereof;
7.3
identified any debits made to the trust ledger accounts in question,
and to
show that the said debits were lawfully made. Mr Nonxuba and
or Nonxuba incorporated were required to provide copies of all the
source documentation relating to payments made from the accounts.
7.4
proved that the credit balance in each trust ledger account is still
held in
trust except for one matter where the funds had been
transferred to another law firm.
[8]
For ease of reference I refer to the application referred to in
paragraph
[7] as the conditional application. The conditional
application was also set down for hearing on the same date as the
main application
on 10 August 2021. On 10 August 2021, Mr Nonxuba's
legal representatives provided the LPC's legal representatives with
copies of
redacted trust bank statements of Nonxuba Incorporated for
the month of July 2021 together with some accounting records
comprising
in excess of 2000 pages. This necessitated a postponement
of the conditional application to enable the LPC to peruse and
consider
the accounting records. By agreement between the parties the
matter stood down until
13
August
2021.
[9]
On 12 August 2021, the LPC supplemented its papers by filing an
affidavit
commenting on the documents provided to the LPC's legal
representatives by Mr Nonxuba's legal representatives. In the
supplementary
papers, the LPC pointed out that the documents so
furnished did not show that Nonxuba Incorporated still held the funds
in trust
because Mr Nonxuba had failed to provide a list of trust
creditors as well as the amounts owed to such creditors which could
be
reconciled with the balance in the trust bank statement.
[10]
The examination of the reducing balance in the redacted bank
statement was also a cause for concern to the LPC as it showed that
a
sum of R10 500 000 had been transferred from trust to business during
the month of July 2021 and that all these transfers were
in perfectly
round numbers.
[11]
The examination of the trust ledgers in one matter revealed that a
sum of R4 805 500.30
was transferred as fees from the trust
account to the business account before the date of the order obliging
the MEC, EC to pay.
In another matter the examination of the trust
ledgers revealed that a sum of RS 908 971.80 was transferred as fees
from the trust
account to the business account before the date of the
order obliging the MEC, EC to pay. There were also a number of other
accounting
irregularities that were identified.
[12]
The matter came before Le Ro x AJ on 13 August 2021 who was
presented with a draft order granting an interim interdict and
postponing
the conditional application to 26 October 2021·with
a timetable for the filing of further papers. Mr Nonxuba delivered
his
answering papers on 15 September 2021. The answering papers
raised some technical defences which·I do intend to set out as
they were subsequently abandoned.
[13]
On the merits of the counter application, Mr Nonxuba provided
documents that comprised five arch lever files which he said were
demonstrative of the fact that the money that was paid in the five
medical negligence cases was still in trust. He also provided
corrected trust ledger accounts in respect of the two matters in
respect of which the LPC had pointed out that monies were transferred
from trust to business at a time when no funds were held in trust in
respect of those matters.
[14]
On 30 September 2021, the LPC delivered a notice of its intention
to amend the conditional application together with its replying
affidavit. On 6 October 2021, Mr Nonxuba delivered a Notice in terms
of Rule 30 indicating his intention to ask the Court to strike
out
the LPC's notice of intention to amend the conditional application.
[15]
The matter was allocated tome for case management and the first case
management meeting
was held on 26 October 2021, being the date on
which the conditional application was set down for hearing. I do not
intend to deal
in detail with what transpired during the case
management meetings except to say that Mr Nonxuba was granted an
indulgence to file
a further affidavit dealing with the issues which
he complained constituted new matter. The parties have provided their
written
consent in terms of Rule 37A (15) of the Uniform Rules of
Court for me to preside over this matter despite having been the case
management judge.
[16]
At this stage, the LPC's case is that his trust reconciliation has
been fabricated. This, taken
together with the delay in paying
the
damages
award
to
the
respective
trust
and
the round transfers
gives rise to a suspicion that Mr Nonxuba has stolen the trust
monies. The allegation that the trust reconciliation
is based on the
documents provided by Mr Nonxuba which show that as at 31 July 2021
he had 12 trust creditors and that the balance
standing to their
credit was R101 721 310.63.
This
amounts reconciles with the balance in the trust bank statement but
that is not where the enquiry ends as Mr Nonxuba contends.
[17]
One of the irregularities apparent in this list of trust creditors is
that Nonxuba Incorporated
is one of the trust creditors and the
balance standing to its credit is RS 925 881-.03. Mr Nonxuba did not
provide a trust ledger
account in respect of this trust creditor. In
six of the trust ledger accounts provided by Mr Nonxuba, none of the
receipts or
debits reflected in the trust ledger accounts reconcile
with the bank statement. In the other five trust ledger accounts,
only
the receipts reconcile with the amounts reflected with the trust
bank statements.
[18]
Mr Nonxuba has given no explanation for these irregularities.
Instead he bemoans the fact that the deponent to the LPC's affidavit
is not an expert and that for all his years that he has been in
practice, Nonxuba Incorporated has been issued with Fidelity Fund
certificates as it had been receiving unqualified audit opinions in
respect of its trust accounts. Mr Nonxuba also makes the point
that
the LPC has not established any shortfall in the trust account of
Nonxuba Incorporated.
[19]
That Nonxuba Incorporated has been issued with Fidelity Fund
Certificates in the past years cannot avail Mr Nonxuba in light of
these patent irregularities. The documents provided by Mr Nonxuba
show that the accounting records have indeed been fabricated.
I say
this because there can be no way of explaining why a trust ledger
would indicate that monies were received on a particular
date when no
such credit appears in the trust bank statement.
[20]
The irregularities identified by the LPC are not limited to the ones
dealt with above but
for the purposes of determining whether Mr
Nonxuba should be suspended from practice, the fabrication of
accounting records suffices.
As submitted on behalf of the LPC it is
in the interest of Mr Nonxuba's clients, the Court, the public and
the profession that
Mr Nonxuba be urgently interdicted from practice
on the terms outlined in the LPC's amended conditional notice of
motion.
[21]
In the result an order is granted in terms of the draft order
annexed hereto marked
"X".
JUDGE
L.G. NUKU
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
Attorney S.
Koen
Attorneys:
Bisset Boehmke &
McBlain
Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
Advocate E. Kllllan, SC
Advocate
C. McKelvey
Instructed
by
Enzo Meyers Attorneys
(Ref:
Mr. E. Meyers)
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: 10313/2021
BEFORE
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE L.G. NUKU
MONDAY,
18
th
DAY OF APRIL 2022
In
the matter between:
THE
SOUTH
AFRICAN
LEGAL
PRACTICE
COUNCIL
1
st
Applicant
MEC
FOR THE EXECUTIVE
COUNCIL
FOR
HEALTH
2
nd
Applicant
OF
THE WESTERN CAPE
PROVINCIAL DEPARTMENT
and
ZUKO
MACK MICHAEL NONXUBA
1
st
Respondent
NONXUBA
INC.
2
nd
Respondent
NOMVELWANA
ALICIA
LITHEMBA
NONXUBA
3
rd
Respondent
ORDER
HAVING
HEARD
the legal representatives for the
1
st
applicant
and the
1
st
respondent,
it is ordered that:
1.
That pending the final determination of an application to be
brought
by the 1at applicant for the striking off of the name of the 1st
respondent from the roll of attorneys:
1.1.
The 1at respondent is suspended with immediate effect from practising
as an attorney;
1.2.
The 1at respondent shall surrender and deliver to the Registrar of
this Honourable Court
his certificate of enrolment as an attorney;
1.3.
Should the 1at respondent fail to comply with the provisions of the
preceding paragraph
of this order within 1 (one) week from date
hereof, the Sheriff for the District in which such certificate of
enrolment is, shall
be empowered and directed to take possession of
and deliver the same to the Registrar of this Honourable Court;
1.4.
The 1
ST
and/or 2
nd
respondents shall deliver
his books of account, records, files and documents containing
particulars and information relevant to:
1.4.1.
any moneys received, held or paid
by the 1at and/or 2
nd
respondents
for or on account of any person;
1.4.2.
any moneys invested by the 1at respondent
and/or 2nd respondents in
terms of section 86 (3) of the LPA;
1.4.3.
any interest or moneys so invested
which was paid over or credited to
the 1at and/or 2
nd
respondents;
1.4.4.
any estate of a deceased person,
or any insolvent estate, or any
estate placed under curatorship of which the 1at respondent is the
executor, trustee or curator
or which the 1
st
respondent
is administering on behalf of the executor, trustee or curator of
such estate; and the 1at and/or 2nd respondent's practice
as an
attorney;
to
the curator appointed in terms of this order, provided that as far as
such books of account, records, files and documents are
concerned,
the 1at and/or 2nd respondents shall be entitled to have access to
them, but always subject to the supervision of such
curator or a
nominee of such curator;
1.5.
That should the 1
st
and/or 2
nd
respondents fail
to comply with the provisions of the preceding paragraph of this
order within 1 (one)
week
from the date of this order the
Sheriff for the district in which such books of account, records,
files and documents are, be empowered
to take possession of and
deliver them to such curator.
1.6.
That the curator shall be entitled to:
1.6.1.
hand
over
to the persons entitled thereto all such records,
files and documents;
1.6.2.
hand over all such records, files
and documents over which the 1st
and/or 2
nd
respondents exercised a lien to the persons
entitled thereto as soon as he has satisfied himself that the fees
and disbursements
in connection therewith, if any, have been paid or
secured, or in the event of any dispute as to the provision of
security, in
his discretion.
1.7.
That a written undertaking by a person to whom the records, files and
documents referred
to in paragraph 1.4 above are handed to pay such
amount as may be due to the 1
st
and/or 2
nd
respondents, either on taxation or by agreement, shall be deemed to
be satisfactory security for the purposes of the preceding
paragraph
hereof provided that such written undertaking incorporates a
domicilium citandi et executandi
of such person.
1.8.
That such curator be empowered to require that any such file, the
contents of which he
may consider to be relevant to a claim, or
possible or anticipated claim, against him and/or the 1
st
and/or 2
nd
respondents and/or the 1
st
and/or
2
nd
respondent's clients and/or the Legal Practitioners
Fidelity Fund (hereinafter referred to as ''the Fund•) in
respect of money
and/or other property entrusted to the 1
11
and/or 2
nd
respondents, be re.-delivered to such curator.
1.9.
That, the 1
st
respondent and any other person who
was,
prior to 13 August
2021,
authorised to operate upon the trust account(s) be interdicted and
prohibited from operating on the trust account(s).
1.10.
That, the Director for the time being of the Gauteng office of the
1
st
applicant, be appointed as curator to administer
and control the trust account of the 1
st
and/or 2
nd
respondents comprising the separate banking accounts opened and kept
by the 1
st
and/or 2nd respondents at a bank in terms
of section 86 (2) of the LPA and/or any separate savings or
interest-bearing accounts
as contemplated by section 86 (3) and/or 86
(4) of the LPA, in which money from such trust banking accounts have
been invested
by virtue of the provisions of the said subsection/s or
in which moneys in any manner have been deposited or credited (the
said
account(s)) being herein referred to as "trust account(s)")
with the following powers and duties:
1.10.1
subject to the approval of the Legal Practitioners'
Fidelity Fund
Board (hereinafter referred to as "the Board"), to sign and
endorse cheques and/or withdrawal forms and
generally to operate upon
the trust account(s), but only to such extent and for such purpose as
may be necessary to bring to completion
current transactions in which
the 1st and/or 2
nd
respondents were acting at the date of
this order;
1.10.2
subject to the approval and control of the Board,
to recover and
receive and, if necessary in the interests of persons having lawful
claims upon the trust account(s) and/or against
the 11t and/or 2nd
respondents in respect of money held, received and/or invested by the
1•1 and/or 2nd respondents in terms
of section 86 (3) and/or 86
(4) of the LPA (hereinafter referred to as “trust moneys"),
to take legal proceedings which
may be necessary for the recovery of
money which may be due to such persons in respect of incomplete
transactions in which the
1
st
and/or 2nd respondents
may have been concerned and which may have been wrongfully and
unlawfully paid from the trust account(s)
and to receive such moneys
and to pay the same to the credit of the trust account(s);
1.10.3
to ascertain from the 111 and/or 21111respondent's
books of account
the names of all persons on whose account the 1
11
and/or
2nd respondents appear to hold or to have received trust moneys
(hereinafter referred to as "trust creditors")
and to call
upon the 1
11
and/or 2
nd
respondents to furnish
him, within 30 (thirty) days of the date of this order or such
further period as he may agree to in writing,
with the names,
addresses of and amounts due to all trust creditors;
1.10.4
to call upon such trust creditors to furnish
such proof, information
and affidavits as he may require to enable him, acting in
consultation with, and subject to the requirements
of the Board of
Control of the Fund, to determine whether any such trust creditor has
a claim in respect of money in the trust
account(s) and, if so, the
amount of such claim;
1.10.5
to admit or reject, in whole or in part, subject
to the approval of
the Board of Control of the Fund, the claims of any such trust
creditor, without prejudice to such trust creditor's
right to access
to the civil courts;
1.10.6
having determined the amounts which he considers
are lawfully due to
trust creditors, pay such claims in full, but subject always to the
approval of the Board of Control of the
Fund;
1.10.7
in the event of there being any surplus in the
trust account(s) after
payment of the admitted claims of all trust creditors in full, to
utilise such surplus to settle or reduce,
as the case may be,
firstly, any claim of the Fund in terms of section 86 (5)(a) of the
LPA in respect of any interest therein
referred to and, secondly,
without prejudice to the rights of the creditors of the 1•
and/or 2
nd
respondents, the costs, fees and expenses
referred to in paragraph 2 of this order, or such portion thereof as
has not already
been separately paid by the 111 and/or 2nd
respondents to the 111 applicant, and, if there is any balance left
after payment in
full of such claims, costs, fees and expenses, to
pay such balance, subject to the approval of the Board, to the
1
11
and/or 2
nd
respondents, if they are solvent,
or, if the 1
11
and/or 2nd respondents are insolvent, to
the trustee(s) or liquidator(s), as the case may be, of the
1
st
and/or 2nd respondent's insolvent estate(s);
1.10.8
in the event of there being insufficient moneys
in the trust banking
account(s) opened by the 1n and/or 2nd respondents in terms of
section 86 (2) of the LPA from which to pay
the claims of trust
creditors in full and after taking reasonable steps to ascertain the
identities of such creditors and the amounts
due to them to
distribute pro rata amongst creditors whose claims have been proved
or admitted, the amount(s) reflected by the
credit balance(s) in said
account(s) provided that the curator shall pay to trust creditors
whose funds are held in separate accounts
in terms of section 86(3)
and/or 86(4) of the LPA who satisfy him that they are entitled to
such funds, the amounts due to such
creditors;
1.10.8.1
subject to the approval of the Board, to close the trust account(s)
and pay the credit balance(s) to the Fund and to require the credit
balance(s) to be placed to the credit of a special trust suspense
account in the name of the 1
st
and/or 2
nd
respondent in the Fund's books;
1.10.8.2
to refer the claims of all trust creditors to the Board to be dealt
with in terms of the provisions of the LPA;
1.10.8.3
to authorise the Board to credit the credit balance(s) referred to
above to its "Paid Claims Account" when the Fund has paid,
in terms of section 55 of the LPA, admitted claims of the
trust
creditors in excess of such credit balance(s), provided that,
notwithstanding the aforegoing, the said Board shall be entitled,
in
its discretion, to transfer to its "Paid Claims Account"
the amount of moneys of any claim or claims as and when admitted
and
paid by
it;
1.10.8.4
subject to the approval of the Chairman of the Board , to appoint
nominees or representatives and/or consult with and/or engage the
services
of attorneys and/or counsel, and/or accountants
and/or other persons, where considered necessary, to assist such
curator in carrying
out the duties of curator; and to render from
time to time, as curator, returns to the Board of Control of the Fund
showing how
the trust account(s) has
(have)
been dealt with,
until such time as the said Board notifies him that he may regard his
duties as terminated.
2.
That the 1
st
and/or 2nd respondent are directed:
2.1 to pay the
fees and expenses of the curator, such fees to be assessed at the
rate of R1 000,00 per hour,
including travelling time;
2.2 to pay the
reasonable fees and expenses charged by any person(s) consulted
and/or engaged by the curator
as aforesaid;
2.3 to pay the
costs of and incidental to this application on a scale as between an
attorney and client;
2.4 within 1
(one) year of him having been requested to do so by the curator, or
within such longer period
as the curator may agree to in writing, to
satisfy the curator, by means of the submission of taxed bills of
costs, or otherwise,
of the amount of the fees and disbursements due
to the 1
st
and/or 2nd respondents, In respect of their
former practice, and should he fail to do so, he shall not be
entitled to recover such
fees and disbursements from the curator
without prejudice, however, to such rights, If any, as he may have
against the trust creditor(s)
concerned for payment or recovery
thereof.
3.
That the striking off application referred to in paragraph 1
above
must be issued within 4 (four) months of the granting of this order.
4.
That the papers in the conditional application brought under
case
number 10313/21 are not subject to the confidentiality of the Court
order granted on 13 August 2021 under the same case number.
BY
ORDER
OF THE
COURT
COURT
REGISTRAR
Bisset
Boehmke
McBlaln
Box9
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