Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 255South Africa
Williams v Legal Practice Council Executive (18762/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 255; [2023] 1 All SA 873 (WCC) (31 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
31 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Williams v Legal Practice Council Executive (18762/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 255; [2023] 1 All SA 873 (WCC) (31 October 2022)
Williams v Legal Practice Council Executive (18762/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 255; [2023] 1 All SA 873 (WCC) (31 October 2022)
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sino date 31 October 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
number: 18762/2019
In
the matter between:
KEVIN
AUGUSTUS
WILLIAMS
Applicant
and
THE
LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
EXECUTIVE
Respondent
####
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 31 OCTOBER 2022
VAN
ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
This is essentially an application for the
judicial review of a decision taken by the then Cape Law Society’s
disciplinary
committee on 9 July 2018. The application is brought
under the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”).
The Cape Law Society was replaced by the South African Legal Practice
Council (“the LPC”) as a result of the provisions
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 (“the LPA”). The LPC
opposed the application, accepting that the applicant intended
to
refer to it.
2.
I say that this is “essentially”
a review application because, when regard is had to the papers, the
issues are unfortunately
clouded by a myriad of irrelevant and
wide-ranging extraneous information which makes it difficult to
ascertain precisely what
the applicant seeks. At the hearing of the
application, and given the nature and extent of the papers, I
confirmed with the applicant
that what the Court was required to
determine was a PAJA review. The applicant acknowledged that this was
the case, but referred
me to the other relief sought in the “
Final
Ammended (sic) Notice of Motion
”.
3.
I discussed the notice of motion with the
applicant in court, dealing in turn with each of the prayers and
indicating to the applicant
where, and why, the relief sought therein
was not competent. The prayers were as follows, and I set out in
respect of which of
them I am of the view that they do not seek
relief that should (and in some instances, can) be granted by the
Court:
3.1.
“
Directing
that the above Honourable Court review the findings of the Legal
Practice Council in respect of their investigations into
the conduct
of Mr Nick Elliot and in respect of their reasons granted on December
13, 2018
”.
This is the core of this application, and shall be dealt with below.
(I ignore the manner in which the relief is formulated
in this prayer
and in the others because, as the respondent points out, such
formulation seeks that the Court directs itself to
make a finding or
order, which is not competent. I accept that this is not what the
applicant had in mind.)
3.2.
“
Directing
that the above Honourable Court make a finding that the current
officials at the Legal Practice Council who had previously
served as
the Cape Law Society, had covered up egregious acts of malfeasance by
their members between the periods of 2015-2020
which had corrupted
all related investigations and findings
”.
No officials were cited as parties to the application so as to state
their version as against the applicant’s allegations,
and the
information put up by the applicant in support of this part of his
case is speculative, clearly born of the applicant’s
frustration with his situation. The relief sought is, in addition,
vague in material respects. It is not apparent from the applicant’s
papers what the purpose of the order sought is, how it would be given
effect to, or who it should be directed at. In the circumstances,
it
is incompetent in law and the Court cannot grant it.
3.3.
“
Directing
that the above Honourable court review the 2018 findings of the Legal
Practice Council Officials in respect Mr Nick Elliot
”.
This relief is effectively a repeat of the relief sought in paragraph
3.1 above.
3.4.
“
Directing
that the above Honourable Court compel the Legal Practice Council to
investigate separate complaints lodged with them
in July 2019 against
Mr Elliot for inter alia: fraud, theft of trust funds, forging of
court documents, obtaining a default order
of R102 000.00 by fraud
etc”.
This
relief involves issues that fall within the respondent’s powers
and duties to be exercised under the LPA. If the respondent
in fact
did not investigate any such later complaints, there is no case made
out on the papers for the judicial review of the respondent’s
failure to take a decision as contemplated in section 6(3) of PAJA.
3.5.
“
Directing
that the Court review the corrupt findings of the LPA / Law Society
officials who had presided over related collusion,
theft and fraud
complaints against Mr Elliot, Mr Viljoen and Mr Pienaar in related
investigations conducted between 2015-2019 due
to this administrative
justice process being required (in order) to restore justice as
contemplated in section 172(1)(a), section
172(1)(b) and section 173
of the constitution
”.
This is again effectively the review relief sought in paragraph 3.1.
3.6.
“
Directing
that the above Honourable Court compel the Legal Practice Council to
cover the costs of all litigation derived from the
unprofessional
conduct of the Legal Practice Council Officials and their members
”.
The relief sought is lacking in particularity. This Court can in any
event not grant costs orders in relation to other
litigation not
before it.
3.7.
“
Directing
that the above Honourable Court compel the relevant attorneys (Mr
Viljoen, Mr Pienaar and Mr Elliot) to provide detailed
pleas to the
allegations contained in this application in order to facilitate that
the civil litigation processes can be concluded
”.
These attorneys are not before the Court, and they have, in the
course of the respondent’s investigation into their
conduct,
already answered the applicant’s allegations (such as the
allegations were at that time).
3.8.
“
Directing
that the above Honourable Court compel the Respondent to provide the
public with the names of legal practitioners who
have been found
guilty of misconduct, specifying the nature of the misconduct in
order that the public can be protected from any
professional or
ethical deficiencies that legal practitioners might have prior to
their appointment”
.
This relief again involves issues that fall within the respondent’s
powers and duties to be exercised under the LPA. It
is of a general
and uncircumscribed nature and is not relief that this Court can
grant pursuant to the applicant’s application
for judicial
review in the present matter. In any event, such an order is
unnecessary because the respondent confirms that it complies
with its
obligations under section 38(3) of the LPA, which provides as
follows:
“
(3)
Particulars of all disciplinary hearings, including the particulars
of-
(a)
the allegations of misconduct being
dealt with;
(b) the
members of the disciplinary committees in question;
(c)
the legal practitioners, candidate legal practitioners or
juristic entities involved in
the dispute; and
(d) the
outcome thereof and any sanction imposed in terms of section 40(3),
if applicable, must, subject
to subsection (4) (a), be-
(i)
published on the website of the Council;
(ii)
updated, at least, once every month by the Council; and
(iii)
available for inspection by members of the public during business
hours of the Council and relevant
Provincial Councils
.”
3.9.
“
Directing
that the Honourable Court grant costs on an own attorney client scale
for this application in the event that Applicant
appoints counsel
”.
The applicant appeared in person.
3.10.
“
Directing
that the above Honourable Court provide compensation and further and
ancillary relief, including relief as contemplated
in terms of
section 57(e)
(sic),
79
(1) and
79
(2) of the
Legal Practice Act
”.
Sections 79(1)
and
79
(2) provide as follows:
“
(1)
The Fund is not obliged to pay any portion of a claim which could
reasonably be recovered from any other person liable.
(2) The Fund may pay
all reasonable expenses and legal costs incurred by a claimant in
exhausting his or her rights
of action against another person.”
In
section 57(1)
the LPA sets out the
purpose and application of the Fund, including, in subparagraph (e),
the use of the Fund to reimburse claimants:
“
57
Purpose and application of Fund
(1)
Subject to the provisions of this Act,
the Fund must be utilised for the following purposes: (e) refunding
the costs or any portion
thereof incurred by a claimant in
establishing a claim or attempting to recover the whole or a portion
of the claim from the person
whose wrongful conduct gave rise to the
claim;.
.”
These provisions involve
administrative matters falling within the powers of the Legal
Practitioners’ Fidelity Fund in the
assessment and payment of
claims lodged against it under the LPA. They do not afford a remedy
to the applicant in this application.
4.
It is against this background that I now deal with
the review relief sought.
5.
The decision
in question was made by a disciplinary committee of the respondent in
relation to a complaint regarding a practising
attorney, Mr Nick
Elliot. The complaint was received from the applicant on 3 February
2017, and (very briefly stated) alleged that
Mr Elliot had failed to
hand over the applicant's files and release money held in trust on
behalf of the applicant. The applicant’s
complaint was already
replete with accusations of fraud, dishonesty, illegality, and of Mr
Elliot being unethical and in “cahoots”
with other
attorneys and the Sheriff. He requested the respondent to (1) order
the immediate release of all legal files relevant
to the mandate that
had been granted to Mr Elliot and (2) the immediate release of funds
he regarded as owing to him into his account.
6.
Mr Elliot
responded to the complaint in detail on 10 February 2017. He
explained that there were amounts owing to his firm by the
applicant,
and that he was in the circumstances entitled to retain the
applicant’s files until such fees and disbursements
had been
paid. This was so because of the common law lien, and further because
the mandate agreement that the applicant had signed
entitled Mr
Elliot to retain the files until he had been paid.
7.
On 9 July 2018
the respondent’s disciplinary committee found that a finding of
unprofessional conduct could not be made. On
the applicant’s
request, full reasons were furnished on 13 December 2018.
8.
I have read all of the documents filed of
record and have considered the application as a whole. In my view,
the applicant does
not cross a crucial initial hurdle that would
allow for the determination of the merits of the dispute in
accordance with PAJA
– the issue of delay.
The principles underlying the
issue of delay in the context of PAJA
9.
Section 7(1) of PAJA provides as follows: “(1)
Any proceedings for judicial review in
terms of section 6(1) must be instituted without unreasonable delay
and not later than 180
days after the date-
(a)
subject to subsection (2) (c),
on which any proceedings instituted in terms of internal remedies as
contemplated in subsection
(2) (a) have been concluded; or
(b)
where no such remedies exist, on
which the person concerned was informed of the administrative action,
became aware of the action
and the reasons for it or might reasonably
have been expected to have become aware of the action and the
reasons.”
10.
In
Opposition
to Urban Tolling Alliance v South African National Roads Agency Ltd
[
2013]
4 All SA 639
(SCA)
at
para [26] the Supreme Court of Appeal held that
this
Court cannot determine the merits of the review application unless
condonation has been granted in the event of non-compliance
with
section 7(1)
:
“
At common
law application of the undue delay rule required a two stage enquiry.
First, whether there was an unreasonable delay and,
second, if so,
whether the delay should in all the circumstances be condoned (see
eg Associated Institutions Pension Fund
and others v Van Zyl and
others
2005
(2) SA 302 (SCA)
para
47). Up to a point, I think, s 7(1) of PAJA requires the same two
stage approach. The difference lies, as I see it, in the
legislature's
determination of a delay exceeding 180 days as per
se unreasonable. Before the effluxion of 180 days, the
first
enquiry in applying s 7(1) is still whether the delay (if any) was
unreasonable. But after the 180 day period the issue of
unreasonableness is pre-determined by the legislature; it is
unreasonable per se
.
It
follows that the court is only empowered to entertain the review
application if the interest of justice dictates an extension
in terms
of s 9. Absent such extension the court has no authority to entertain
the review application at all
.
… That of course does not mean that, after the 180 day period,
an enquiry into the reasonableness of the applicant's conduct
becomes
entirely irrelevant. Whether or not the delay was unreasonable and,
if so, the extent of that unreasonableness is still
a factor to be
taken into account in determining whether an extension should be
granted or not (see eg Camps Bay Ratepayers'
and Residents'
Association v Harrison
[2010] 2 All SA 519
(SCA) para 54).”
[Emphasis
supplied.]
11.
The statement to the effect that the Court
should not entertain the merits at all was qualified in
South
African National Roads Agency Limited v City of Cape Town
2017 (1) SA 468
(SCA) at para [81]
,
in which it was held that the
dictum
“
cannot be read to signal a
clinical excision of the merits of the impugned decision, which must
be a critical factor when a court
embarks on a consideration of all
the circumstances of a case in order to determine whether the
interests of justice dictates that
the delay should be condoned.
”
12.
There are three main principles governing
the delay rule. The first principle is that a party must institute
review proceedings
within a reasonable time. In
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd
2019 (4) SA 331
(CC) the Constitutional Court explained that the
issue of delay is determined using a two-stage process.
13.
In the first stage, the Court determines
whether the delay is unreasonable. This is a factual enquiry in which
all relevant circumstances
are considered, and the Court makes a
value judgment (
Buffalo City
at para [48]). The only difference between a legality review and a
PAJA review is that there is no prescribed period for what will
amount to an unreasonable delay in the former, whilst for the latter
a delay of more than 180 days is
per se
unreasonable (
Bufffalo
City
at para [49]). The applicant’s
case is a PAJA review.
14.
It is thus important to determine when the
starting point of the delay is. In terms of section 7(1) of PAJA,
proceedings for judicial
review must be instituted without
unreasonable delay and in any event not later than 180 days after the
applicant (1) is notified
of the administrative action or (2) became
aware of the action or (3) might reasonably have been expected to
have become aware
of the action. These are three alternative sets of
circumstances that trigger the running of the statutory 180-day
period. The
commencement of the 180 days will therefore be triggered
by whichever alternative occurs first. In
Buffalo
City
at para [49] it was held that for
both PAJA and legality reviews “
the
proverbial clock starts running from the date that the applicant
became aware or reasonably ought to have become aware of the
action
taken”.
The clock does not start
to run only when the applicant becomes aware of the irregularity or
illegality complained of.
15.
In the second stage, if the delay is
unreasonable, the Court must determine whether it should exercise its
discretion to overlook
the delay. There must be a basis for the Court
to do so, based on objective facts (
Buffalo
City
at paras [48] and [53]). The test
is flexible and is informed by several factors, including the
potential prejudice to affected
parties as well as the possible
consequences of setting aside the impugned decision. Prejudice may be
ameliorated by the Court's
power to grant just and equitable remedies
(
Buffalo City
at para [54]). It is, notably, the potential for prejudice, including
prejudice to the efficient functioning of the decisionmaker,
that
informs the delay rule (
Gqwetha v
Transkei Development Corporation Ltd
2006 (2) SA 603
(SCA) at para [23]). Another factor to be taken into
account is the nature of the impugned decision and the alleged
irregularity.
This requires a Court to “somewhat”
consider the merits of the challenge. Where the prospects of success
are strong,
the Court is more likely to grant condonation. The
converse is also applicable (
Buffalo
City
at paras [55] to [58]).
16.
The second principle underlying the delay
rule is the need for certainty and finality, both for parties
affected by a decision as
well as for the administration of the
State. It means that where a Court refuses to determine the validity
of a decision (even
a decision vitiated by irregularity) as a result
of unreasonable delay, "
in a sense
delay would ... 'validate' the nullity
"
(
Harnaker v Minister of the Interior
1965 (1) SA 372
(C) at 381C).
17.
The
third principle is that in exceedingly rare cases, even if a review
is unreasonably late and there is no basis to overlook the
delay, a
Court may still be required to declare conduct unlawful (
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty)
Ltd
2018
(2) SA 23 (CC)
at para [41], read with paras [52] to [53]).
This principle (the so-called "
Gijima
principle")
applies only where the unlawfulness of the impugned decision is clear
and not disputed. In
Buffalo
City
at para [71] it was held that this principle must be interpreted
narrowly and restrictively so that the valuable rationale behind
the
rules on delay is not undermined. The
Gijima
principle has, for example, been applied in cases where an organ of
State lacked authority to make a decision or violated a statutory
requirement (see
ICT-Works
Proprietary Limited v City of Cape Town
[2021] ZAWCHC 119).
18.
In assessing whether to
extend the 180-day period, the Court should have regard to,
inter
alia
, the following
factors as set out in
City
of Cape Town v Aurecon SA (Pty) Ltd
2017 (4) SA 223
(CC) at para [46]:
“ …
s 7(1) of PAJA
states that '(a)ny proceedings for judicial review . . . must be
instituted without unreasonable delay'.
The SCA, relying on this
court's decisions in Van Wyk and eThekwini, adeptly
set out the factors that need
to be considered when granting
condonation as follows:
'
The relevant factors in
that enquiry generally include the nature of the relief sought; the
extent and cause of the delay; its effect
on the administration of
justice and other litigants; the reasonableness of the explanation
for the delay, which must cover
the whole period of delay; the
importance of the issue to be raised; and the prospects of success
.”
[Emphasis supplied.]
19.
It is against this background that the
delay in the institution of the applicant’s application is
considered.
The applicant’s delay
20.
It is common cause that the application was
instituted after the expiry of the prescribed time period. This
application was instituted
on 24 October 2019, more than 10 months
after the respondent had given reasons for its decision. The reasons
were provided on 13
December 2018 and the 180-day period for the
institution of the application thus expired in mid-June 2019. The
delay of four and
a half months was therefore, on the authority of
Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance
,
unreasonable
per se
.
The applicant has not clearly sought condonation in respect of the
delay or sought an extension in terms of section 9 of PAJA,
and the
respondent has raised this issue as a point
in
limine
.
21.
In his founding affidavit the applicant
states that:
“
I seek
condonation of the review of finding by the Legal Practice Council
for the following reasons:
My intention to have the findings
taken on review has never changed and the Legal Practice Council has
acknowledged the same by
agreeing to view my reasons subject to it
being submitted to the Constitutional Court.
“
Systemic
corruption exists at the offices of the legal Practice Council and
the curtailing of this conduct is in the interests of
justice.
The Constitution governs
institutions that serve a public function. Section 22 of the
Constitution, read in conjunction with
Section 3
of the
Legal
Practice Act, provides
us with protection of all our rights as
contemplated in the Bill of Rights, but this is subject to an honest
and functional Legal
Practice Council and in the absence of this our
rights cannot be guaranteed.
Unassailable evidence exists which
proves that the officials of the Legal Practice Council had actively
obstructed and obfuscated
investigations, in order to clear their
members who belong to three law firms related to this case, who had
colluded, aided and
abetted in the theft of a company. My ability to
conclusively prove the aforementioned allegations, the broad public
interest that
a matter of this nature serves, compels the court to
hear the matter and consider sanctions against all attorneys and the
sheriff
who are involved in these acts of corruption and
malfeasance”.
22.
In an “
Application
for condonation
” delivered on 28
January 2021 the applicant simply asks the Court to condone “
any
other technical deficiencies of time
”.
The notice of application reads as follows:
“
KINDLY
TAKE NOTICE that an application will be made to the above to the
above Honourable Court for an order on the following terms:
1.
That
the review of findings of inter alia fraud, theft and collusion
between 3 attorneys namely, Mr Elliot, Mr Viljoen and Mr Pienaar
be
heard.
2.
That
the court similarly hear the application to compel the Legal Practice
Council Executive to investigate or instruct their Western
Cape
Office to investigate the charges filed in 2019 against Mr Elliot for
inter alia:
2.1
Aiding
and abetting in the theft of a company.
2.2
Theft
of trust funds....
2.3
Also
forging a writ and siphoning monies from a trust fund therewith.
2.4
Lying
on a Practice Note for a secret Set Down...
2.5
Obtaining
a fraudulent R102 000.00 default order therefrom.
2.6
In a
separate case of forgery - Changing amounts on a court order to twice
the amount submitted at a reviewed taxation and thereafter
misleading
the taxing master for a secret endorsement thereof.
3.
That
the above Honourable Court condone any other technical deficiencies
of time, service or other to this application due to the
following:
3.1
This is
a novel case - these matters having been ventilated at the
Constitutional Court in September 2020 seeking direct access.
3.2
The
President of South Africa's appointment of a Legal Services Ombudsman
on 22 December 2020.
3.3
Related
matters being corrupted in the magistrate' courts, the High Court,
the SABFS, the Law Society and the Legal Practice Council
due to
administrative justice being compromised.
3.4
Related
matters currently being heard at the JSC a result hereof.
3.5
Numerous
magistrates since 2015 and about 8 High court Judges over the past
three years have presided over related and unresolved
matters due to
the maladministration/administrative of justice at the LPC.
3.6
I am a
layperson.
3.7
This
application has broad public interest.
3.8
This
application serves the interest of Justice.
”
23.
In his supporting affidavit accompanying
the application he repeats the history of the matter and his
conclusions of corruption,
collusion, maladministration and more. The
applicant does not refer to
section 9
of PAJA at all. I am inclined
to agree with the respondent that the condonation application, such
as it is and even when read with
the allegations in the founding
affidavit quoted above, falls short of what is substantively required
to make out a case for condonation.
The applicant relies on sweeping
statements of a conclusory nature but provides little by way of
objective facts.
24.
In his replying affidavit delivered in July
2021 the applicant gave further reasons for the delay, including:
24.1.
The respondent’s delay in providing
reasons for its decision. This is not a sound reason, because the
time period stipulated
in
section 7
of PAJA only commences running
after the giving of reasons.
24.2.
The applicant had previously, in March
2019, instituted a review application in this Court under case number
4072/2019 against the
respondent and eight others. That application
involved the applicant’s complaints against Mr Elliot and the
respondent’s
decision, amongst other issues, although the
relief sought differed in many respects from what is sought in the
present application.
He withdrew that application before instituting
an application for direct access to the Constitutional Court in
August 2019, so
as to avoid a plea of
lis
pendens.
It was only when the
Constitutional Court application was not speedily resolved (and the
applicant had been advised that the High
Court was the proper forum
for the review application) that he instituted this application anew,
under a new case number and against
the respondent only, in October
2019. Various amendments to the notice of motion followed until the
final amended notice was delivered
in March 2021.
24.3.
The applicant cannot cut and paste the
processes of litigation in various courts as he sees fit, and expect
other to fall in with
his course of conduct. He is not entitled to
institute litigation in the High Court, withdrew it because he wants
to proceed in
the Constitutional Court, and then re-institute the
application in the High Court with the expectation that the
respondent will
not or may not take a procedural point that arises as
a result of the applicant’s actions – especially where
such procedural
point constitutes a jurisdictional fact for the
determination of the relief sought.
24.4.
The fact that the respondent knew that the
applicant wished to review the decision does not mean that the
respondent agreed to the
delay in the institution of this
application. In the correspondence between the parties regarding the
matter, the respondent acknowledged
the withdrawal of the first
application, but very clearly indicated that it regarded the second
application (the present application)
as being out of time in the
context of PAJA.
24.5.
It seems from the papers that the applicant
views the initial review applicant and the current one as one and the
same. This is
not correct, as the relief sought in the first
application differs in material respects from the current
application, apart from
the fact that the current respondent is the
only remaining respondent in these proceedings. The material relied
upon by the applicant
in these proceedings have moreover mushroomed
to an extent not achieved in the previous application.
25.
The further reasons given all relate to
events that occurred after the institution of this particular
application, and that are
thus irrelevant to the question of whether
the delay in the launch of the application should be condoned. They
relate to the respondent’s
delay in delivering an answering
affidavit and to correspond with the applicant, the Honourable
Justice Wille’s refusal to
grant an order to compel because of
a conflict of interest, further directions from the Constitutional
Court and ultimately the
Constitutional Court’s order n 16
September 2020. Further litigation for declaratory relief against the
respondent and its
officials followed in June 2021 under case number
10097/2021.
26.
A consideration of the chronology indicates
that, at the latest, the applicant had all of the information
necessary to launch review
proceedings by the time that the
respondent’s reasons were given. He was in a position to launch
these proceedings virtually
immediately, especially when regard is
had to the fact that the complaints levelled against the decision had
to a substantial extent
already been foreshadowed in the
correspondence addressed by the applicant to the respondent prior to
the receipt of the final
reasons. The applicant refers, for example,
to complaints lodged in 2015 (and there were many other between 2015
and 2017, and
thereafter) against Mr Elliot which “
related
to the exact same matter referred to in 2017
”
(when the complaint that underlies the respondent’ decision was
lodged).
27.
In the light of the discussion above, I
return to the relevant factors identified in
Aurecon
in considering whether condonation
should be granted:
28.
The nature of relief sought
:
The applicant is seeking review relief. I do not think that the delay
in this matter would necessarily have caused the respondent
prejudice
in the sense of memories having faded, documents no longer being
available, or officials who had dealt with the matters
in dispute and
had knowledge of the impugned decisions having left its employ.
Nevertheless, I do regard the vitriol with which
the applicant’s
application is presented as prejudicial not only to the respondent,
but to the administration of justice
as a whole.
29.
The effect of the delay on
administration of justice and other litigants
:
Given the serious allegations levelled against the respondent’s
officials, the Sheriff’s office and others, as well
as the
legal practitioners involved, the interests of finality loom large,
even in the absence of actual prejudice. In
Gqwetha
at para [23] it was emphasised that
“
actual prejudice to the
respondent is not a precondition for refusing to entertain review
proceedings by reason of undue delay,
although the extent to which
prejudice has been shown is a relevant consideration.
..”
30.
The extent and cause of the delay
:
The delay is serious given the fact that there is no sound
explanation for it on the papers. I have dealt with the causes
proffered
by the applicant.
31.
The reasonableness of the explanation
for the delay
: The explanation is not
reasonable and does not cover the whole period. The fact that the
applicant corresponded with the respondent
throughout is not an
excuse for the delay (see
Habitat
Council v BPH Properties (Pty) Ltd
[2018] ZAWCHC 98
(17 August 2018) at para [34], albeit in relation to
attempts to avoid litigation).
32.
The importance of the issues to be
raised, and the prospects of success
:
On the face of it the application raises important issues of public
governance. The applicant contends that his “
litigation
for civil, criminal and administrative justice has not wavered over
this six year period, all matters under this review
therefore still
current with prospects of success being good
”.
A proper consideration of the papers indicates, however, that the
applicant’s case is built upon years of frustration
and
speculation. I agree with the respondent that the applicant’s
prospects of success must be regarded as poor. This is
so mainly
because the manner in which the case has been pleaded renders it
difficult to determine precisely what the applicant’s
complaint
is about the legality of the decision. He lists conclusion upon
conclusion without engaging with objective facts and
reasons
underlying those conclusions (which constitute his grounds of
review). This is an inappropriate manner to litigate which
prejudices
the respondent. In
Palala Resources
(Pty) Ltd v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy
2014 (6) SA 403
(GP) at para [29] it was held as follows:
"
Unfortunately, by virtue of
the fact that these grounds were not dealt with in the founding
papers, it was left to the court to
work out which are the relevant
grounds, and what facts speak properly to those grounds. This is not
acceptable. It is the duty
of the legal representatives of litigants
to ensure that their clients' cases are properly formulated and
advanced before the courts.
… This is particularly so in cases
like this one involving constitutional rights. It is now almost 15
years since PAJA was
enacted; there is a substantial body of
jurisprudence on judicial review under PAJA and it is taught in every
law school.
There is no acceptable reason for founding
papers in a review application to fall short of identifying the facts
and grounds of
review clearly and with appropriate reference to the
relevant sections of PAJA that are relied upon. The papers should
also draw
the necessary link between the material facts and the
identified grounds of review.
" [Emphasis supplied.]
33.
The founding and supplementary affidavits
do not draw any sensible link between the material facts and the
grounds of review relied
upon by the applicant. The replying
affidavit raised further grounds of review, not pleaded in the
founding or supplementary affidavits.
These grounds, belatedly
raised, cannot be taken into account in the determination of the
application.
34.
The failure properly to plead the grounds
of review and the facts relied upon also means that the applicant has
failed to displace
the presumption of validity in relation to the
impugned decisions (see
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and others
2014 6 SA 222
(SCA) at para [27]).
35.
I have nevertheless anxiously considered
the merits of the application as part of my consideration of the
issue of delay, but have
come to the conclusion that no case is made
out under PAJA.
It is
clear from the papers that the applicant has sought to review this
decision with reference to almost all the grounds of review
available
under PAJA, including:
35.1.
“
The
administrative action taken was so unreasonable, that no reasonable
person could have so exercised their power or so performed
their
function with appropriate integrity, and thereafter arrive at the
same finding.
35.2.
The administrative
action was taken for a reason not authorised by the empowering
provision because an ulterior motive existed for
the finding.
35.3.
The administrative
action excluded relevant considerations and included irrelevant
considerations for the determination of the findings.
35.4.
The administrative
action was taken in bad faith.
35.5.
The administrative
action was patently biased.
35.6.
The administrative
action was procedurally unfair.
35.7.
The administrative
action was unconstitutional and unlawful.
35.8.
The administrative
action was premised upon systemic corruption.
”
36.
The Court and the
respondent were confronted with a mass of material (including the
same documents being attached to affidavit after
affidavit
repeatedly) from which to attempt to discern what the applicant’s
case is, save for an expression of his frustration
with the system
and contempt for those associated with it.
37.
Apart from the founding papers and
supplementary affidavit, the applicant delivered an “
Amended
/ replacement supplementary affidavit
”
in January 2021, repeating some of the complaints against the
respondent’s conduct and decision, and detailing events
following the appointment of the Legal Ombudsman in December 2020. He
also repeated the chain of events from 2014 leading up to
the
respondent’s decision and thereafter. The affidavit is replete
with paragraph upon paragraph of conclusions of corruption
and
collusion in between which constitutional argument is weaved.
38.
In April 2021 the applicant applied to the
Chief Registrar for the appointment of judges from outside of Cape
Town, but that application
does not seem to have been proceeded with.
39.
A
Rule 16A
notice and further supplementary
affidavit were delivered during February 2022. The
Rule 16A
notice
detailed relief proposed to be sought against and in relation to the
Legal Ombudsman and was aimed at procuring the President
of the
Republic of South Africa and the Minister for Justice and
Constitutional Development to join the proceedings as
amici
curiae
. Nothing came of this.
40.
The further supplementary affidavit
accompanying the
Rule 16A
notice again set out the history of the
applicant’s complaints, and deal with his attempts at obtaining
legal assistance.
As mentioned below, the applicant never approached
the respondent or the Cape Bar Council for
pro
bono
assistance, even though being
ordered to do so.
41.
The applicant commences his heads of
argument with the statement that “
[t]his
case has dragged on for nearly eight years because the Law Society
and thereafter the Legal Practice Council, including the
SABFS [the
South African Board for Sheriffs] has attempted to cover up acts of
gross malfeasance that were perpetrated by their
members, such acts
which included inter alia, fraud, collusion, theft of trust funds,
forging court documents, perjury, intimidation,
including aiding and
abetting in the theft of a company
…”
42.
The argument continues in this fashion,
with heavy reliance on the provisions of the Constitution amidst
allegations of ineffectiveness
of the office of the Legal Ombud and
the applicant’s inability to get redress because of the corrupt
nature of and criminal
conspiracies perpetrated by the legal
profession and various institutions of justice, including the courts
and even judges.
43.
What the applicant sees as “this
case” are, in fact, a series of events and resultant instances
of litigation since
November 2014, when all the trouble started with
an attachment order under section 32 of the Magistrates’ Courts
Act 32 0f
1944 having been granted against the applicant as a result
of the alleged non-payment of rental for his business premises. It
was
the lifting of that order by way of an agreement between the
parties that sparked the applicant’s subsequent complaints
against
his attorney. He denies having given instructions for the
conclusion of a settlement, as he wanted to attack the attachment
order
in court. He sets out the train of events in detail – I
do not intend repeating everything that followed.
44.
For the purposes of this application, the
applicant eventually lodged various complaints against the attorneys
mentioned in the
notice of motion with the respondent, and it is the
outcome of the complaint against Mr Elliot that is the focus of this
application.
The applicant’s complaints are not limited to the
instances that occurred prior to the institution of the application.
In
his heads of argument, for example, he accuses Mr Elliot of
“further acts of criminality” committed during April
2022,
in respect of which complaints have been made. The respondent
has not yet taken a decision in relation to such complaints.
45.
I have considered the respondent’s
decision in relation to Mr Elliot. I cannot find that the respondent
has not duly considered
the information available to it in a fair and
unbiased manner, and that it has not properly exercised its mind in
reaching its
conclusion upon such information.
46.
It is clear, unfortunately, that the
applicant has been and will be dissatisfied with any finding made
against what he perceives
as the truth and as justice. Left with
little recourse after all of the years, he appears in this
application to be “litigating”
his allegations against
whomever he can reach in the hope that it would give him a further
bite at the cherry. The applicant argues
that “
it
is statistically impossible for the outcomes of related matter to
have gone for 6 years consistently against me if justice was
applied
lawfully, fairly, reasonably and independently. This statistic
becomes more improbable when viewing the racial demographics
and the
roles of the key players ie. attorneys, judges, magistrates, the law
society, Sheriffs Board, Legal Practice Council, the
Western Cape
Public Protector and the Director of Legal Services for the Western
Cape, both the latter being approached –
the entire list being
white.
” He proceeds to name every
person on his list.
47.
Fundamentally, the applicant’s
problems with the decision boils down to a difference of opinion
about the conduct and motives
of the attorney who had assisted him,
to his dissatisfaction, at the outset. He essentially complains that
the respondent is wrong
in its assessment of the situation given the
“
irrefutable evidence
”
in his possession. He is also frustrated with the law, and the way
that the legal system operates (this is clear from the
continued
accusations of bias and maladministration against the magistrates and
judges presiding over the civil litigation that
had ensued over the
years in relation to the matter).
48.
The applicant in fact seeks an
appeal, not a review. He relies upon events and documents which he
interprets in a certain manner
so as to reach a conclusion, and he
seeks to persuade everyone that his interpretations and conclusions
are correct. In the words
of Hoexter (
Administrative
Law in South Africa
((2ed) Juta) at
108), appeal and review are both ways of reconsidering a decision.
While the reason for seeking the one or the
other usually the same –
dissatisfaction with the result – appeal and review perform
different functions. Appeal is
appropriate where it is thought that
the decision-maker came to a wrong conclusion on the facts of the
law. It is concerned with
the merits of the case, meaning that on
appeal the second decision-maker is entitled to declare the first
decision right or wrong.
49.
Review, on the other hand, is not concerned
with the merits of the decision but with the matter in which it was
reached. The focus
is on process, and on the way in which the
decision-maker came to the challenged conclusion. One can, of course,
not entirely avoid
scrutiny of the merits on review (Hoexter at 110
to 111 points out that the distinction is often regarded as
artificial) but the
distinction should at least be observed at the
point of judicial intervention – where a Court should not, in a
review, impose
its own idea of what the right decision should be on
the parties. The applicant in the present matter squarely seeks an
order that
the respondent’s decision was wrong. This is the
language of appeal, not review.
50.
Lastly, the
Gijima
principle (referred to earlier) has no application in the present
case. The irregularities complained of by the applicant cannot
be
construed as “clear and indisputable” unlawfulness in the
context of the information placed on record.
51.
In all of these
circumstances I am of the view that the applicant has not established
that condonation of his delay in the institution
of the proceedings
would be in the interests of justice.
52.
It is not necessary for
me to decide the respondent’s further point
in
limine,
which is
whether Mr Elliot, who was the subject to the decision that the
applicant seeks to review, should have been joined to
the
application.
Conclusion
53.
As much as I sympathise with the applicant
who is pursuing a quest for what he perceives as justice, I cannot,
on these papers,
find in his favour in relation to the relief sought.
Costs
54.
The applicant was unrepresented. He had
clearly put much effort into compiling the papers and was serious
about his cause, whatever
the merit thereof. He conducted himself
respectfully and with dignity in court. One does not lightly depart
from the general rule
that costs follow the result, but I did
deliberate whether each party should pay his or its own costs,
amongst other reasons because
the applicant appeared in person and
the respondent would probably not be able to extract any funds from
the applicant in any event.
55.
I decided against it in the end,
considering that the applicant should bear responsibility for the
launch of these unsuccessful
proceedings. This is so for three
reasons.
56.
First, and as indicated earlier, the
affidavits upon which the applicant relied were unstructured and
filled with material that
was argumentative and irrelevant for the
purposes of the review relief claimed. He did not clearly indicate
what his cause of action
was, and did not clearly identify those
facts upon which he relied in support of the relief claimed. The
replying affidavit, moreover,
was replete with new information, much
of which had clearly been available to the applicant at the time when
the founding affidavit
was drafted. The applicant sought to introduce
wide-ranging new relief based upon such information:
“
60.
In
the premise I seek the following relief:
60.1 That the Honourable Court make
an order in terms of
section 8(1)(c)
of the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act, setting
aside the findings of Mr Elliot,
Mr Pienaar, Mr Viljoen and Ms Robertson.
60.2 That the Honourable Court make
a finding that the complaints stem from a common cause, directing
that in terms of
section 7(2)(a)
and
7
(2)(b), that internal remedies
be exhausted in terms of the LPA.
60.3 That the Honourable Court make
an order in terms of
section 8(2)(b)
of PAJA, when read in
conjunction with
section 6(g)
of PAJA declaring my right to have all
the aforementioned matters related to this case reviewed before an
Ombudsman in terms of
section 48
of the LPA.
60.4 That the Honourable Court make
an order in terms of
section 48(1)(a)
and
section 48(1)(b)
of the
LPA, instructing that the Ombud resolve all issues in this matter,
prior to further litigation in the High Court.
60.5 Directing that the Honourable
Court instruct that the entire case file be placed before the
Ombudsman.
60.6 That the Court make an order,
directing the Ombud or that the Minister in terms of
section 50(2)
of
the LPA appoint an Acting Ombud in order that the related matters of
this case can be resolved.
60.7 That the
Honourable Court make a finding of fact and law about the conduct of
the LPC and its predecessor the Cape Law Society,
providing also
particular detail about the effects of their conduct in subsequent
related litigation matters that compromised the
ability of judges to
rule in matters brought before the JCC on 11 June 2020.
”
57.
The respondent naturally objected to this,
and I did not venture into a determination of this relief. The
Ombudsman, against whom
wide-ranging relief is sought in reply and
about whose office various allegations are made, had in any event not
been joined as
a party to this application.
58.
I
have referred to the manner in which the papers had been drafted,
which made it difficult for the respondent and the Court to
ascertain
the precise relief sought. It was prejudicial to the respondent to
have to attempt to divine, from the mass of information
on record,
what case it had to meet: see
Reynolds
NO v Mecklenberg (Pty) Ltd
1996
(1) SA 75 (W)
at 78I. In that case the Court deprecated the
disorderly presentation of facts in lengthy affidavits containing
much argumentative
matter. As a result the Court was “
given
no clear context of facts which are common cause, and no clear
guidance as to the dispute of facts which must be evaluated
against
the background of such a context
”
(at 83A–C). The same applies in the present matter. The
applicant himself conceded in his replying affidavit that
his
founding papers might have been poorly drafted, and that some of the
allegations therein were scandalous. He argued that the
state of the
papers should be excused because he was a layperson.
59.
Secondly, and in relation to the layperson
argument, the applicant had on previous occasions been advised or
ordered to obtain
pro bono
assistance,
inter alia
in this Court by the Honourable Justice Samela and the Honourable
Judge President Hlophe, and by the Constitutional Court in July
2022,
when the applicant made application for direct access to that Court.
60.
The last instance was on 22 July 2021 when
this Court (the Honourable Justice Fortuin presiding) postponed this
application
sine die
and ordered the applicant to apply to the respondent for the
appointment of a
pro bono
attorney. The applicant avers that he had made application for
assistance to bodies such as the law clinics of the Universities
of
Cape Town, Stellenbosch, the Western Cape and Wits, as well as the
Legal Aid Board, the Human Rights Commission, the Helen Suzman
Foundation, Lawyers for Human Rights, Afriforum and “
numerous
other organisations
” including
the American Bar Association. He does not say what the applications
contained.
61.
The applicant however never did make
application to the respondent for such assistance - the respondent
has no record of any such
application. This is despite the fact that
the respondent had provided the applicant with the contact details of
both its and the
Cape Bar Council’s
pro
bono
departments. The applicant claimed
that he would not be assisted because no
attorney
would act against a colleague. I do not accept this explanation.
There are many attorneys – not necessarily in the
Western Cape
- who would have been able to assist. Had the applicant applied for
assistance, an attorney could have been appointed.
He failed to
apply, and was thus the author of his own predicament.
62.
Thirdly, in his many affidavits and the
annexures thereto, as well as in the heads of argument, the applicant
made unsubstantiated
and, frankly, scandalous comments about and
accusations against no fewer than 22 persons, including attorneys who
formerly represented
him, the Sheriff of the Court, officials
employed by the respondent, the Chief Magistrate of Goodwood, the
Cluster Head for Magistrates
in Wynberg, the Head of the Public
Protector in Cape Town, the Director of Legal Services of the
Department of Justice in the Western
Cape, and against three
permanent judges of this Court, all of whom had made rulings against
the applicant in various proceedings
over the years. These
allegations contained material such as:
62.1.
“…
staggering amounts of
corruption amongst the attorneys which included colluding with the
opposing attorneys to compromise my legal
matter, stealing funds in
trust, forging court documents for gain, drafting a fraudulent writ
.. and using that writ to obtain
funds from my trust account, also
lying in pleas to court in order to have a matter secretly set down
so that a default order ..
could be contrived thought fraud
”.
62.2.
“…
these officials [of the
respondent] having caused this culture of corruption to flourish…
”.
62.3.
“
The Western Caspe LPC officials
along with their members had committed numerous egregious,
unprofessional and criminal acts which
all serve an illegal common
purpose…:
”
62.4.
“
Fostering and promoting a corrupt
relationship with the sheriff of the court by instructing him to
operate maliciously and without
a court order, to unlawfully attach
my goods …
”
62.5.
“
Conspiring with the sheriff and
fellow attorneys to steal a company .
..”
62.6.
“
Theft / selling goods illegally …
conspirational and criminal actions … unethical conduct …
sabotage …
stealing funds in trust … lying,
intimidation and harassment …extortion…
”
62.7.
“
That the officials aggressively
promoted delinquency and unethical conduct…
”
62.8.
In relation to complaints lodged by the
applicant against identified judges of this Court (who displayed “
an
unhealthy bias
” towards the
applicant) and regarding the members of the Judicial Conduct
Committee who exonerated the judges: “…
it
became patently clear that they had absolutely no idea about critical
aspects of the case, rendering their decisions arbitrary
and
capricious
”.
62.9.
“
The orders of Judges Sher, Gamble
and … Wille … are mere consequences of a criminal
conspiracy to deny me justice
…
”
62.10.
There are too many examples to mention, and
they are repeated in reams of paper.
63.
The allegations made in relation to these
persons are argumentative and are expressions of the applicant’s
vehemently-held
opinion. They are unsupported by objective facts and
do not contribute in any way to the proper determination of the
relief sought
in the application.
64.
In all of these circumstances, justice
dictates that the applicant bear the costs of this application. What
should the scale of
such costs be?
The
respondent argued that the scandalous accusations made by
the applicant without
restraint in this application warrant a punitive costs order. I
agree.
65.
The
established position regarding an award of attorney and client costs
is set out in
Nel
v Waterberg Landbouwers Ko-operative Vereeniging
1946 AD 597
at 607:
"
The
true explanation of awards of attorney and client costs not expressly
authorised by Statute seems to be that, by reason of special
considerations arising either from the circumstances which give rise
to the action or from the conduct of the losing party, the
court in a
particular case considers it just by means of such an order, to
ensure more effectually than it can do by means of a
judgment for
party and party costs that the successful party will not be out of
pocket in respect of the expense caused to him
by the litigation
."
66.
In
MEC
for Public Works, Roads and Transport, Free State v Esterhuizen and
others
2007 1 SA 201
(SCA) at para [9] the Supreme Court of Appeal found
that an award of attorney and client costs was warranted in a case
which unsubstantiated
allegations against the trial judge had been
made. The Court held that “
it
is unacceptable that allegations of impropriety can be made against a
judge in so cavalier a fashion...As a mark of opprobrium,
I think a
punitive costs order should be imposed o
n
the scale as between attorney and client
."
67.
The Constitutional Court in
Mkhatshwa and others v Mkhatshwa and
others
2021 (5) SA 447
(CC) at para
[26]
made a similar
punitive costs order as a mark of its displeasure with the
accusations levelled by the applicants against various
judicial
officers:
"
It will
not do for litigants to resort to unscrupulous tactics to succeed in
this Court, especially when such tactics involve unjustifiable
attempts at bringing shame and disrepute upon Judicial Officers. This
is because the Judiciary, unlike other branches of government,
must
rely solely on the trust and support of the public in order to fulfil
its functions. Consequently, any conduct that undermines
and erodes
the authority and integrity of the Judiciary must be prevented.
Litigants who resort to the kind of tactics displayed
in this matter
must beware that they are unlikely to enjoy this Court's sympathies
or be shown mercy in relation to costs. The
only reasonable
conclusion in the circumstances is that a punitive costs order is
apposite.
"
68.
On the basis
of this precedent, and having considered the tenor of the documents
filed of record, I regard a punitive costs order
as appropriate in
the present matter.
Order
69.
The following order is granted:
69.1.
The application is refused.
69.2.
The applicant is to bear the costs of
the application on the scale as between attorney and client.
P.
S. VAN ZYL
Acting
judge of the High Court
Appearances:
The
applicant in person
For
the respondent
: Mr S. Koen, instructed
by Bisset Boehmke McBlain
sino noindex
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