Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 7South Africa
Grundler N.O and Another v Zulu and Others (D8029/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 7 (20 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
20 February 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Grundler N.O and Another v Zulu and Others (D8029/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 7 (20 February 2023)
Grundler N.O and Another v Zulu and Others (D8029/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 7 (20 February 2023)
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FLYNOTES:
CONDUCT
OF LEGAL PRACTITIONERS
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE NO: D8029/2021
In the matter between:
ANDRE GRUNDLER
N.O. FIRST
APPLICANT
BODY CORPORATE OF
ELWYN COURT
SECOND APPLICANT
and
LEE
ZULU FIRST
RESPONDENT
LEGAL PRACTICE
COUNCIL, KWAZULU-NATAL
PROVINCIAL
OFFICE SECOND
RESPONENT
JUDGMENT
SHAPIRO
AJ
[1]
The first applicant is the court appointed administrator of the
second applicant,
having been appointed by this Court in August 2010.
[2]
There are two applications that serve before me: first is an
application compelling
the first respondent, who is an advocate of
this Court, to provide copies of the application papers issued under
case number D3896/2021
that served before my brother Nkosi J on 8
July 2021 and in terms of which His Lordship granted an order that
the second applicant
would henceforth be under the administration of
a Board of Trustees.
[3]
The second application is an application for the committal of the
first respondent
to prison, alternatively, that he would be directed
to pay a fine, arising out of his contempt of an interim order
granted by my
sister, Masipa J on 13 September 2021 in terms of which
the first respondent was directed to provide the applicants'
attorneys
with the application papers to which I have already
referred.
[4]
The first respondent did not provide the application papers despite
personal service
upon him of Masipa J’s order and instead
delivered an opposing affidavit which appears to be in respect of
both the main
application and the contempt application. I will revert
to this in due course.
[5]
Up to a point, I can understand why the members of the second
applicant are frustrated
with the ongoing administration of the body
corporate. The body corporate has been under administration for
almost 13 years - a
period that no court could have contemplated, and
which seems to me to be unduly long.
[6]
Applications have been launched and remain pending in the Regional
Civil Court in
terms of which the first applicant sought the
provisional extension of his appointment until a Special General
Meeting of the second
applicant could be convened and the members
could resolve whether they wished to exit administration and be
governed internally.
[7]
The last Order granted by that court on 2 March 2020 directed that a
Special General
Meeting be convened within 60 days. Whilst that order
was granted just before the country went into a hard lockdown that
was then
followed by slowly reducing restrictions on meetings imposed
under the various iterations of the disaster regulations promulgated
by the government, there is no reason that I can fathom why that
meeting has not yet been convened.
[8]
Even if there was a delay caused by the Covid regulations, those
restrictions were
lifted quite some time ago, and the meeting could
have been convened at the very latest during 2022.
[9]
However, this issue is not directly before me, and the views that I
express are both
to place the matter in context and to indicate a
level of understanding of the actions of the members of the body
corporate.
[10]
It may well be that the frustrations of the members of the second
applicant led to the application
being launched that served before my
brother Nkosi J on 8 July 2021, under case number D3896/2021
[1]
.
[11]
It is that application that has caused matters to go somewhat awry.
[12]
There is no doubt that the application papers existed or that there
was a court file opened by
the Registrar of the Court, as the matter
was on the Motion Court Roll for 8 July 2021 and His Lordship
obviously had a basis upon
which he decided to grant the Order.
[13]
The first respondent appeared on that day and quite obviously was in
possession of a copy of
the application papers.
[14]
Despite this, the first respondent refused at the time to supply a
copy of the papers to the
applicants’ attorneys when they
requested them and then failed some months later to supply a copy
despite being ordered to
do so.
[15]
The first respondent appeared before me, robed, at the opposed
hearing on 9 February 2023. When
I asked him where the application
papers were, he stated from the bar that he “thought”
that they were at his office
at Commercial City, Durban.
[16]
When I asked the first respondent why the papers had not been
supplied as ordered, his only response
was to refer to the answering
affidavit filed of record. He did not appear to distinguish between
his alleged clients’ position
as litigants (assuming for the
purposes of argument that they were in fact
bona fide
litigants) and his own – not only as an advocate but as the
subject of a court order that compelled him personally to act.
[17]
What was clear to me was that the first respondent expected to find a
copy of the papers at his
offices - something to which I will return
presently.
[18]
I stood the matter down and directed the first respondent to return
in the afternoon with a copy
of the papers or, at the very least, a
set of the draft, unsigned papers.
[19]
However, when the matter was recalled, the first respondent stated
that he had been unable to
find a copy of the papers in any form and
that he now assumed that a copy of the application papers was with
his clients.
[20]
In a final attempt to bring the application to a sensible conclusion,
I postponed the application
to 16 February 2023 and gave the first
respondent one last opportunity to comply with the provisions of
Masipa J’s order
by 12h00 on 14 February 2023.
[21]
On 16 February 2023, the first respondent submitted that he had been
unable to find a copy of
the papers and could not provide them.
[22]
The first respondent is an officer of this Court. He refused to
cooperate with the applicants'
attorneys and to take the obvious and
reasonable step of providing them with a copy of the issued
application papers upon which
he had submitted that the Court could
grant the order which was then granted.
[23]
His entirely dismissive view that the first applicant’s
attorney should have communicated
directly with the members of the
body corporate and requested the papers from them lacks any merit.
The first respondent was the
sole legal representative of those
members
[2]
, and it was proper
that the first applicant’s attorney communicate with him and
not with his “clients”.
[24]
This behaviour was unprofessional, obstructive, and dilatory and
certainly is not the behaviour
one would expect from a legal
practitioner.
[25]
Regardless of the view that the first respondent may have taken of
the order granted by Nkosi
J, what cannot be disputed is that this
Order was suspended by Masipa J, who also ordered the first
respondent either to provide
the relevant application papers or to
advise the applicants of who was in possession of the papers.
[26]
Madam Justice Masipa’s Order was served on the first respondent
personally on 17 September
2021.
[27]
The first respondent's answer is contained in his affidavit that was
delivered on 15 October
2021.
[28]
Apart from accusing the first applicant of substituting the court
file contents (a reckless,
inflammatory and spurious allegation), the
first respondent admitted that he presented the case as counsel for
the body corporate.
[29]
The first respondent’s argument was that the first applicant
should have requested the
application papers from the second
applicant, and he then attempted to be coy and to defend his refusal
or failure to provide a
copy of the papers by saying that he had a
duty to uphold "confidentiality" with the body corporate.
[30]
This, with due respect to the first respondent, is nonsense. The
applicants were not asking for
the disclosure of privileged
communications but simply for a copy of issued application papers
which, by definition, are public
documents.
[31]
In the same dilatory vein, the first respondent claimed the need to
consult with the body corporate
and its members before releasing the
application papers.
[32]
To make matters worse for the first respondent, he then alleged that
it was the first applicant
who was acting in breach of Nkosi J’s
Order by continuing to present and conduct himself as the
administrator of the body
corporate and was therefore acting in
contempt of that Order, justifying “a punishment incorporating
imprisonment”.
[33]
All this while the first respondent was already in breach of Masipa
J’s Order – an
“amazingly brazen attitude to
adopt”
[3]
.
[34]
It is revealing that the first respondent did not say anywhere in his
answering affidavit that
he was not in possession of the application
papers, or at least a copy of them. He could not honestly have said
so because he annexed
a copy of the Notice of Motion issued on 30
April 2021 to that affidavit. He represented the body corporate and
signed that Notice
of Motion as the body corporate's counsel.
[35]
Similarly, the first respondent anticipated returning to court on 9
February 2023 with the papers
when I gave him the opportunity to do
so – he must then, at the very least, have had a good idea
where those papers were
filed.
[36]
Whatever strategy the first respondent thought he was following,
there is no excuse for his refusal
to comply with an order of this
Court and there is no explanation from him why he did not comply
after personal service of the
order upon him.
[37]
There is a rising trend in the legal profession of practitioners
demonstrating disrespect (if
not outright contempt) for courts and
the judiciary. One does not need to look far to find examples of this
sort of behaviour,
from the ranks of senior counsel to the most
junior of candidate attorneys. It manifests not only in how
practitioners interact
with opponents and judges in and out of court
but also in the launching of
prima facie
spurious
applications, lacking in factual or legal foundation, that are
designed to “snatch bargains”, achieve ulterior
objectives, delay and/or obstruct. It is a “win at all costs”
attitude that does a disservice to the profession and
to the country
and sets an appalling example to the public at large. It ignores not
only the oath that all lawyers take upon their
admission but also the
distinction between the duty that practitioners owe to their clients
and the separate duty that they owe
to the Court.
[38]
The first respondent failed in this most basic duty. He did not
distinguish between his clients’
interests and his own
professional and ethical obligations. Had he acted appropriately,
neither the main application nor the application
for contempt would
have been necessary. Time and significant expense would have been
saved.
[39]
It is therefore appropriate that the first respondent be referred to
the second respondent, so
that his conduct as a legal practitioner
can be investigated and, if required, sanctioned.
[40]
I turn to consider whether the applicants have established that the
first respondent acted in
contempt of court.
[41]
I accept that courts must be slow to impute
mala
fides
to a legal practitioner, who will not “be guilty of negligence
merely because he committed an error of judgment, whether
on matters
of discretion or law. It is a question of degree and there is a
borderline within which it is difficult to say whether
a breach of
duty has or has not been committed… An attorney is not
responsible for any wrongful act committed by him qua
attorney within
the scope of his authority:
qui
facit per alium facit per se
.
There is, however, a duty of care owed by an attorney conducting
litigation on behalf of a client, to the court, and a duty of
care
owed towards his opponent.”
[4]
[42]
Masipa J’s order was served personally on the first respondent.
[43]
He did not comply with it, and there is no evidence that he advised
his clients of the order
either.
[44]
The first respondent bears the evidential burden of showing that his
conduct was neither wilful
nor mala fide.
[45]
The requirements for contempt of court were restated by His Lordship
Mr Justice Cameron (as he
then was) in
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[5]
.
[46]
The applicants must prove the requisites of contempt (the order;
service or notice; non-compliance;
and wilfulness and
mala
fides
) beyond reasonable doubt. But, once the applicants have
proved the order, service or notice, and non-compliance, the first
respondent
bears the evidential burden referred to above
.
If
the first respondent fails to advance evidence that establishes
beyond a reasonable doubt as to whether his non-compliance was
wilful
or mala fide, contempt would have been established beyond reasonable
doubt.
[47]
The first respondent did not advance any of the requisite evidence,
at any level.
[48]
Having been required personally to deliver the papers or identify the
persons in whose possession
the papers were, the inference is
irresistible that first respondent must have foreseen that his
actions could result in the breach
of Masipa J’s Order. He
therefore foresaw the possibility of that consequence and he
reconciled himself to it
[6]
.
[49]
As was held in
Jonker
, the evaluation of whether the first
respondent is in contempt is a matter of degree and it may be that in
some cases, there is
a borderline where a legal practitioner’s
conduct (even if negligent) does not breach their professional duty
or their duty
to the court.
[50]
There is no borderline here: the first respondent is not being held
responsible for the misconduct
of his clients, and their contempt is
not being imputed to him. The first respondent, himself, was directed
by court order to perform.
Instead of complying, and after service of
that Order, he then elected to advance a defence to the main
application whilst ignoring
his separate obligation to comply with
the Order and seeking orders that the first applicant be held in
contempt.
[51]
I therefore have no difficulty in concluding that the first
respondent was in contempt of this
Court's order of 13 September
2021.
[52]
Officers of this Court must be held to a higher standard of conduct
then lay people
[7]
. If attorneys
or advocates ignore court orders, there would be little to stave off
the ultimate collapse of the rule of law.
[53]
As Cameron JA reminded us
[8]
,
contempt of court is
‘
not
merely a mechanism for the enforcement of court orders. The
jurisdiction of the Superior Courts to commit recalcitrant litigants
for contempt of court when they fail or refuse to obey court orders
has at its heart the very effectiveness and legitimacy of the
legal
system… That, in turn, means that the Court called upon to
commit such a litigant for his or her contempt is not only
dealing
with the individual interest of the frustrated successful litigant
but also, as importantly, acting as guardian of the
public interest.’
[54]
This court will not tolerate the conduct of a legal practitioner who
treats it with contempt
and who ignores binding court orders.
[55]
There must be a serious consequence for this kind of behaviour.
[56]
The first respondent neither delivered nor secured the delivery of
the 2021 application papers.
He has now submitted that they cannot be
found.
[57]
One cannot get blood from a stone, and I must accept that it is now
no longer possible for the
first respondent to comply with Masipa J's
Order. Similarly, it would be an exercise in futility now to grant
the directory relief
sought in the main application or in the
contempt application.
[58]
However, that is not the end of the matter. I accept without
reservation that the first respondent
was in possession of a copy of
the application papers as late as 15 October 2021 when he delivered
the answering affidavit in the
main application. This must be so
because he annexed a copy of the Notice of Motion in that
application, that he signed, to the
affidavit.
[59]
Therefore, almost one month after he was served personally with an
order directing him to deliver
the application papers forthwith, he
was in possession of them and chose not to deliver them.
[60]
It is noteworthy that the first respondent has not even put up a copy
of the draft application
papers.
[61]
That the first respondent can no longer purge his contempt by deliver
delivering the application
papers, does not change the fact that he
was in contempt of Masipa J's Order, and must suffer the
consequences.
[62]
Whilst I was inclined to impose a sentence of direct imprisonment
without the option of a fine
upon the first respondent, justice must
be tempered with a modicum of mercy. I would like to think that,
given the chance, the
first respondent would now react quite
differently, and would understand where his obligations lie and the
seriousness of failing
to comply with orders of court.
[63]
A serious sanction, however, remains appropriate, and will be
reflected in the orders that are
granted.
[64]
The first respondent has submitted that he should not pay the costs
personally and should not
have been joined in the proceedings. He
argued that he was only the legal representative and that it was his
clients who should
have been the respondents.
[65]
I do not agree: the applications were launched in the very specific
circumstances described above.
It was comfortably within the first
respondent’s professional and ethical ability to cooperate with
the applicant’s
attorneys or, at the very least, to comply with
the Order of 13 September 2021. There is no evidence on the papers
that he tried
to comply, or that he advised his clients to comply on
his behalf.
[66]
Before the opposing affidavit was delivered, Masipa J’s Order
had been served. Neither
application should have gone a step further
– the first respondent should have realised what was required,
and ameliorated
his conduct. He did not do so – he did the
opposite and then sought to cast the applicants as the contemnors.
[67]
Given the view that I have taken of the first respondent's conduct
and ultimately how unnecessary
the main and interlocutory
applications should have been, there is no reason why the applicants
should pay any of the costs of
these applications. A punitive costs
order is warranted.
[68]
The final issue to be determined is the fate of the Order granted by
Nkosi J on 8 July 2021.
[69]
That Order was suspended pending the final determination of the
applications, no doubt on the
basis that the delivery of the
application papers would enable the applicants then to launch an
application for the rescission
of that Order.
[70]
This is now not possible and would lead to a situation where any
application for rescission would
be based on speculation as to the
contents of the application papers and of the reasons why His
Lordship granted the initial order.
The applicants would not be able
to demonstrate prospects of success in the absence of the grounds
upon which the original Order
was granted.
[71]
Mr Broster SC, who appeared for the applicants together with Mr
Stewart, advised me from the
Bar that the first respondent had
consented to an order rescinding Nkosi J’s Order because the
application papers could not
be found.
[72]
Whilst this is undoubtedly the most practical solution, I cannot rely
on the first respondent’s
apparent consent to that order. The
body corporate remains under administration and I am not convinced
that the first respondent
has any authority to consent to this order,
or any other, on behalf of the body corporate.
[73]
There is also no application for rescission before me.
[74]
Any rescission therefore would have to be granted
mero motu
if
sufficient grounds for this existed.
[75]
It is undisputed that the first respondent had represented members of
the body corporate in the
lower courts in various proceedings brought
by the first applicant and his attorneys. The first respondent knew
that the body corporate
was under administration and, if nothing
else, knew that the first applicant would contend that the body
corporate remained under
administration.
[76]
The effect of the Order sought by the first respondent and granted by
Nkosi J was to reimpose
governance over the body corporate by an
elected Board of Trustees to the exclusion of the first applicant.
[77]
It is obvious that the first applicant would have a direct and
substantial interest in those
proceedings, and he should have been
cited as a respondent.
[78]
There are simply no reasons that I can fathom how or why the first
respondent legitimately could
have launched the application
ex
parte
and, in the same vein, there is no way that Nkosi J would
have granted such an order had full disclosure of all the material
facts
been made to him. In those circumstances, His Lordship would no
doubt have required service of the application on the first applicant
and his attorneys.
[79]
In terms of Rule 42(1)(a) of this Court's Rules, a court may
mero
motu
rescind or vary an order or judgment erroneously sought or
erroneously granted in the absence of any party affected by it.
[80]
Our courts have found that a judgment was erroneously granted, if at
the time of its issue, there
existed a fact or facts of which the
court was unaware and which would have precluded the granting of the
judgment or would have
induced the Court, if aware of these facts,
not to grant to the judgment. Similarly, if material facts were not
disclosed in an
ex
parte
application, or if a fraud was committed (by facts being deliberately
misrepresented to the court) or if an order was granted in
an
ex
parte
application without notice to a party who had a direct and
substantial interest in the matter, any such order was erroneously
granted
[9]
.
[81]
It is, in my view, clear that the order granted by Nkosi J on 8 July
2021 was granted erroneously
in the absence of the first applicant
and that it should be set aside.
[82]
Given the express wording of Rule 42(1)(a), it was not necessary that
the applicants first launch
an application for rescission before such
an order can be granted and, for all of the reasons set out in this
judgment, it is manifestly
in the interests of justice and expedition
that I grant such an order
mero motu
.
I
grant the following orders:
1.
The first
respondent is declared to be in contempt of the order of Her
Ladyship,
the Honourable Madame Justice Masipa granted under case number
D8029/2021 on 13 September 2021.
2.
The first
respondent is directed to pay a fine of R30,000.00 (thirty thousand
rand) alternatively is directed to serve a period
of imprisonment of
30 (thirty) days.
3.
The sentence
contemplated in paragraph 2 of this Order is suspended for five years
on condition that the first respondent is not
again declared to be in
contempt of court.
4.
The
applicant’s attorneys are directed to deliver a copy of the
application papers in both the main application and the application
for contempt (if they have not already done so) together with a copy
of this judgment to the second respondent within 15 (fifteen)
days of
the date of this Order in order that the first respondent’s
conduct as a legal practitioner be investigated.
5.
The Order of
this Court granted on 8 July 2021 under case number D3896/2021 is
rescinded
mero
motu
in
terms of Rule 42(1)(a) on the basis that it was erroneously granted
in the absence of the first applicant.
6.
The first
respondent is directed in his personal capacity to pay the costs of
both the main application and the application for
contempt and all
reserved costs on the scale as between attorney and client.
SHAPIRO
AJ
APPEARANCES
Date of
Hearing: Thursday,
09 February 2023; and
Thursday, 16 February
2023
Date of Judgment
: Monday,
20 February 2023
Applicants’
Counsel: Mr
L Broster SC with Mr M Stewart
Instructed
by: Erasmus
Van Heerden Attorneys
Applicants Attorneys
8 Rydall Vale Crescent
La Lucia Ridge Office
Estate
Durban…4051
(Ref: ELW1/0173/JVH/rr)
(Tel:031 – 655
9000)
Email:
collections4@evhlaw.co.za
First Respondent’s
Counsel:
Advocate L
Zulu (IP)
436 Commercial City
40 Dr Xhuma Street
Durban
(Ref. Mr L Zulu)
(Cell No: 074 –
2757 034)
Email:
leezulu557@gmail.com
Second Respondent’s
Counsel: No
appearance
Instructed
by: Legal
Practice Council
KwaZulu-Natal Provincial
Office
Second Respondent
1
st
Floor, 200
Haffejee Street
Pietermaritzburg
KwaZulu-Natal…3200
(Tel: 033 – 345
1304 ext 213)
Email:
sanelisiwen@lpc.org.za
gugum@lpc.org.za
[1]
The allocated case number according
to the copy of the Order annexed to the founding papers and the
Notice of Motion annexed to
the first respondent’s answering
affidavit.
[2]
Something he confirmed in his
submissions on 16 February 2023
[3]
Bezuidenhout v Patensie Sitrus
Beherend Bpk
2001 (2)
SA 224
(E) at 228F
[4]
Jonker and Another v Stoffels
(1222/2008)
[2010] ZANCHC 46
(25 May 2010) at para [28]
[5]
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) at para
[42]
[6]
HEG Consulting Enterprises
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Siegwart and Others
2000 (1) SA 507
(C) at 521J to 522B
[7]
HEG Consulting
,
above, at 520J to 521A
[8]
Fakie NO,
above,
at para [38]
[9]
Naidoo and Another v Matlala NO
and Others
2012 (1) SA 143
(GP at paras [6] and [7]
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