Case Law[2024] ZASCA 176South Africa
Siyabonga Gugulethu Galela (Ex parte application) (1294/2023) [2024] ZASCA 176 (13 December 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
13 December 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Admission as a legal practitioner – explanation required on failure to attach degree certificates – insufficient disclosure on directorship in a company during practical vocational training – in supplementary papers failures remedied – failure to attach LLB certificate condoned – proper explanation of indebtedness – good cause shown for contravention of Legal Practice Council rule 22.1.5.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Siyabonga Gugulethu Galela (Ex parte application) (1294/2023) [2024] ZASCA 176 (13 December 2024)
Siyabonga Gugulethu Galela (Ex parte application) (1294/2023) [2024] ZASCA 176 (13 December 2024)
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sino date 13 December 2024
FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION – Admission –
Full disclosure –
Information applicant obliged to
disclose in ex parte application for admission – High Court
finding that appellant
not fit and proper person – Failure
to disclose directorship of company – Business failed and
company never opened
bank account, received no income and did not
file tax returns – Non-disclosure not intended to deceive –
Failure
to attach LLB certificate due to being in arrears with
fees – Appeal upheld – LPC authorised to enrol
appellant
as legal practitioner – Legal Practice Council
Rules, rule 22.1.5.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 1294/2023
In
the ex parte application:
SIYABONGA
GUGULETHU GALELA
APPELLANT
Neutral
citation:
Siyabonga
Gugulethu Galela
(
Ex
Parte Application
) (1294/2023
[2024]
ZASCA 176
(13 December 2024)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, MOLEFE, SMITH and UNTERHALTER
JJA and DOLAMO AJA
Heard:
04 November 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email, publication on
the Supreme Court of Appeal
website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down of
the judgment is deemed to be 11h00
on 13 December 2024.
Summary:
Admission as a legal practitioner –
explanation required on failure to attach degree certificates –
insufficient disclosure
on directorship in a company during practical
vocational training – in supplementary papers failures remedied
– failure
to attach LLB certificate condoned – proper
explanation of indebtedness – good cause shown for
contravention of Legal
Practice Council rule 22.1.5.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(Johnson AJ and Bokako AJ sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal against the order of
the high court is upheld.
2
The order of the high court is
set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
2.1
The applicant has shown good cause for contravening rule 22.1.5.1 of
the Legal Practice Council (LPC)
rules, and it is declared that the
practical vocational training contract entered into between the
applicant and Dr Eric Levenstein
is not void
ab
initio
,
and that the service rendered thereunder is effective, as
contemplated under rule 22.1.5.2 of the LPC rules;
2.2
The applicant, Siyabonga Gugulethu Galela, be admitted to practise
as
a legal practitioner and is authorised to be enrolled as an attorney
of the High Court of South Africa in terms of s 24(2) of
the Legal
Practice Act 28 of 2014 (the LPA); and
2.3
The LPC is authorised to enrol the applicant as a legal practitioner
in accordance with the provisions of s 24, read with s 30, of the
LPA.’
JUDGMENT
Nicholls
JA (Molefe, Smith and Unterhalter JJA and Dolamo AJA concurring):
[1]
That a legal practitioner should display
impeccable integrity and the utmost honesty is unarguable. What
courts have grappled with,
is what conduct renders a person unfit to
be a legal practitioner. The Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria (the high court)
held that Ms Siyabonga Gugulethu Galela (Ms
Galela), the appellant, was not a fit and proper person to be
admitted as a legal practitioner.
The primary issue for determination
is this: what information was Ms Galela obliged to disclose in her
ex
parte
application for admission, and
what consequences flow from the lack of full disclosure?
[2]
The
admission of legal practitioners is governed by the Legal Practice
Act 28 of 2014 (the LPA). Section 24(6)
[1]
provides that the high court must admit to practice: a person who is
duly qualified; is a South African citizen or permanent resident;
who
has served an application containing information as determined by the
rules; and who is a fit and proper person to be so admitted.
Section
26
[2]
of the LPA sets out the
minimum qualifications and the vocational training required. These
include having satisfied the requirements
for an LLB degree obtained
at any registered university in South Africa, after pursuing it for
the required number of years.
[3]
Ms Galela launched an
ex
parte
application for her admission
as a legal practitioner to the high court in June 2023. She attached
a statement of her academic
record from the University of the
Witwatersrand (Wits) which reflected that she had qualified for a
Bachelor of Arts degree on
19 December 2018 and had graduated on 28
March 2019. The academic record for the LLB reflected that she had
qualified on 14 December
2020. It did not reflect that she had
graduated.
[4]
At the time Ms Galela commenced her admission
application, she was employed at Werksmans Attorneys having entered
into, and completed,
a practical vocational training contract (PVT
contract) with a director at the law firm. On receipt of the
application, the Gauteng
Provincial Office of the LPC drew Ms
Galela’s attention to two matters. First, the fact that she had
not attached her LLB
certificate to the application. Second, that she
had stated under oath that she did not occupy any other position, nor
was she
engaged in any other business whatsoever other than that of a
candidate legal practitioner. The LPC pointed out that according to
the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission’s eServices
(CIPC) website, Ms Galela was listed as having held an active
directorship in an enterprise during her period of service as a
candidate legal practitioner. She was invited to file a supplementary
affidavit, as was her principal, explaining her failure to obtain
prior written consent from the LPC, as required by the rules
and to
indicate why her LLB degree certificate had not been attached.
[5]
Rule 22.1.5 of the rules of the Council
provides:
‘
22.1.5.1
A candidate attorney shall not have any pecuniary interest in the
practice and service of an attorney, other than in respect of bona
fide remuneration for his or her services as a candidate attorney,
and shall not, without prior written consent from the Council, hold
or occupy any office in respect of which he or she receives
any form
of remuneration, directly or indirectly, or engage in any other
business other than that of candidate attorney, where
holding that
office or engaging in that business is likely to interfere with the
proper training of the candidate attorney.
22.1.5.2
If any candidate attorney
contravenes the provisions of rule 22.1.5.1
the contract concerned shall be void
ab
initio
and service rendered
thereunder shall be ineffective unless the court on good cause shown
otherwise directs.’
[6]
On receipt of the letter from the LPC, Ms
Galela filed a supplementary affidavit. She stated that, in 2014, she
became a director
of Varsigator Solutions (Pty) Ltd (Varsigator)
which was incorporated with the aim of developing a mobile
application (the app)
to assist students to navigate their university
experience, both geographically and with regard to recruitment
activities and career
opportunities. It appears that the app did not
gain much traction, and in 2017 it became impractical for her to
pursue any work
on developing the app while continuing with her
studies.
[7]
Ms Galela says that from 2017 onwards the company was
‘completely
dormant and had thus entered the deregistration process’. She
attached a document from the CIPC eServices
biz portal which
indicated that the company’s office recorded on 25 February
2017 and 12 June 2019 that there had been no
annual returns filed, no
payments made and that the company was in the process of
deregistration. On 31 March 2023 it was recorded:
‘FINAL
DEREGISTRATION DUE TO ANNUAL RETURN NON COMPLIANCE’.
[8]
Ms Galela attributes her failure to obtain
prior written consent to her belief, genuinely held, that her
directorship of Varsigator
had automatically ceased once it stopped
trading in 2017. She therefore was of the opinion that when she
entered into a PVT contract
on 1 February 2021, the company had been
defunct for some four years. Accordingly, it did not interfere with
her practical vocational
training.
[9]
Ms Galela’s principal at Werksmans
Attorneys confirmed under oath that she did not disclose her position
as a director of
Varsigator but that she performed all tasks assigned
to her in a satisfactory manner and her training under the PVT
contract was
proper and complete. Ms Galela’s mother who was
the administrator of Varsigator, confirmed that as from February 2017
her
daughter performed no duties or functions as a director of the
company which had to all intents and purposes ceased to exist.
[10]
Regarding her failure to attach the LLB
certificate, Ms Galela explained that Wits does not issue degree
certificates to graduates
who are in arrears with their fees.
Nonetheless, the academic transcript is proof that she has met the
necessary academic requirements
for the BA Law and LLB degrees.
She provided no information as to why her university fees had not
been paid since at least
2020.
[11]
When her application for admission came before
the high court, the application of Ms Galela and that of another
applicant were stood
down to the end of the roll. It appears that Ms
Galela’s counsel was informed that there was a problem with her
admission.
Judgment was reserved in these two matters. When judgment
was delivered on 18 August 2023 in the high court, the application
for
the admission of Ms Galela as a legal practitioner was dismissed
on the basis that she was not fit and proper.
[12]
The grounds for this finding were twofold.
First, with reference to Varsigator, she did not resign as a
director. The high court
held that it was not open to her, or her
principal, to decide whether her business would interfere with her
training as a candidate
attorney, only the LPC could make that
determination. Significantly, she failed to disclose that she was a
director of Varsigator,
and stated under oath that she did not ‘hold
any position or engage in any business whatsoever other than that of
a candidate
legal practitioner…during the period of service of
my PVT contract’. Although she was under a duty to ascertain
the
true status of the business, she failed to do so. Instead, she
placed patently untrue facts before the high court. The fact that
she
believed that the company had been deregistered was not well-founded
and in any event did not excuse the fact that she made
untrue
statements under oath.
[13]
As regards the second ground, namely Ms
Galela’s failure to produce her LLB certificate as a result of
not having paid her
fees to Wits, the high court found that it was
highly irresponsible for any person to ignore their financial
obligations, least
of all a person who wanted to become an attorney.
The court noted that Ms Galela had proffered no reasons as to why she
had reneged
on her financial obligations.
[14]
There was no appearance by the LPC to object to
the admission of Ms Galela. The high court quite correctly pointed
out that the
LPC is obliged to do more than merely send an email in
which its objections are set out. In such circumstances there should
be
a substantive contribution by the LPC indicating that it has
properly considered the matter and whether it supports the admission
or not.
[15]
At the hearing before this Court, it was
conceded that insufficient facts had been proffered on both issues,
and that further disclosure
was warranted, before a determination
could be made as to whether Ms Galela was a fit and proper person to
be admitted as a legal
practitioner. She was obliged fully and
candidly to disclose why there was a differentiation between the two
academic transcripts
which were attached to her papers, the Bachelor
of Arts degree certificate and the Bachelor of Laws degree
certificate. While inability
to pay debts is not necessarily a ground
for an adverse finding as to a candidate’s suitability to
become a legal practitioner,
absent an adequate explanation, there
may well be grounds to find that Ms Galela is a recalcitrant debtor
and therefore not fit
and proper. On the papers before us the only
information provided was that she was in arrears with her fees.
Therefore although
she had completed the requirements for the
qualification, she was ‘not in possession of [her] LLB degree.’
[16]
As to Varsigator, a more detailed explanation
was provided but this too was insufficient. She stated that she did
not ever derive
an income from the company, and from 2017 did not
perform any functions as a director. More was required than the bald
assertion
that it was a non-trading company which had been
deregistered in 2023. More concerning is that the directorship was
not disclosed
in her original application, but only upon this being
investigated by the LPC.
[17]
This Court decided that it was in the interests
of justice to allow Ms Galela an opportunity to address these two
issues more comprehensively,
in another supplementary affidavit,
rather than remitting the matter back to the high court.
[18]
In her further supplementary papers, Ms Galela
provided a detailed explanation regarding her failure to pay her
university fees.
Her mother also provided an affidavit in which she
set out fully what led to her being unable to pay her daughter’s
fees.
At the beginning of 2020, Ms Galela signed an acknowledgment of
debt with Wits as she had been unable to make full payment since
2018. The financial situation of her family deteriorated and once she
commenced her PVT at Werksmans Attorneys, she contributed
to the
household expenses. This was confirmed by Ms Galela’s mother.
In short, Ms Galela stated that she was not a recalcitrant
debtor,
rather she was unable to pay the large sum of more than R143 000
which was owing to Wits. Significantly, the amount has
now been
settled and there is no longer an outstanding amount owing to Wits.
[19]
Ms
Galela, relying on the
ex
parte
application
of
Tlotlego,
[3]
believed
that it was unnecessary to provide any further details as to why she
had not paid her university fees. The high court set
aside a practice
directive in the Gauteng Division requiring proof of a payment
arrangement entered into with the university regarding
payment of the
outstanding fees, where a degree certificate had not been attached
due to failure to pay tuition fees. It held that
the absence thereof
could not disqualify a legal graduate from entering the profession,
and it was not the preserve of the court
to oversee the
debtor/creditor relationship between a former student and the
university.
[4]
[20]
As
such, the high court in
Tlotlego
found
that evidence of a payment arrangement to satisfy the court that the
debt with the university would be purged, was not relevant
to the
evaluation of fitness and propriety. It held that courts should never
act as a ‘gatekeepers of students in poverty’.
[5]
[21]
It is correct that courts will not keep a
poverty stricken graduate out of the legal profession. However, where
an applicant for
admission as a legal practitioner fails to attach a
degree certificate, a full and detailed explanation for this omission
must
be provided. There may well be grounds for condoning the lack of
a degree certificate, but this will not always be the case. The
applicant has to put up sufficient evidence to show that she is not a
recalcitrant debtor. Any person who deliberately and intentionally
fails to pay their tuition fees, when they have the means to do so,
or at least to make some inroads in the reduction of their
indebtedness, is not a person of impeccable honesty and integrity and
thus is not a fit and proper person to enter the legal profession.
[22]
Ms Galela also set out further details in
respect of her directorship of Varsigator. She and a friend had set
up the business on
the strength of R300 000 provided by her mother in
exchange for a 20 per cent share in the business. This was paid to a
company
to develop the app. The development ultimately failed and the
business did not get off the ground. Varsigator never opened a bank
account, it received no income, as a result of which it filed no tax
returns. Ms Galela attempted to recoup the monies from the
development company and left the process of deregistration to her
mother. In hindsight, she acknowledges that this was irresponsible
and that she should have driven the process of deregistration of
Varsigator, or at least conducted enquiries as to its status at
the
time of launching her application for admission.
[23]
Ms Galela’s supplementary affidavit has
set out a proper explanation as to why she did not disclose that she
was a director
of Varsigator. In short, the business failed. As a
result Varsigator never opened a bank account, received no income and
did not
file tax returns. In my view her non-disclosure, albeit
negligent, was not intended to deceive nor did the directorship
interfere
with her proper training. There are sufficient grounds for
this Court to condone her non-compliance with rule 22.1.5. In
addition,
I am satisfied that her reason for non-payment of her
university tuition is not due to any dishonesty on her part but
rather a
genuine inability to pay her fees at the time. These have
now been paid in full. In the circumstances I am of the view that Ms
Galela is a fit and proper person to be admitted to the legal
profession.
[24]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal against the order of
the high court is upheld.
2
The order of the high court is
set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
2.1
The applicant has shown good cause for contravening rule 22.1.5.1 of
the Legal Practice Council (LPC)
rules, and it is declared that the
practical vocational training contract entered into between the
applicant and Dr Eric Levenstein
is not void
ab
initio
,
and that the service rendered thereunder is effective, as
contemplated under rule 22.1.5.2 of the LPC rules;
2.2
The applicant, Siyabonga Gugulethu Galela, be admitted to practise
as
a legal practitioner and is authorised to be enrolled as an attorney
of the High Court of South Africa in terms of s 24(2) of
the Legal
Practice Act 28 of 2014 (the LPA); and
2.3
The LPC is authorised to enrol the applicant as a legal practitioner
in accordance with the provisions of s 24, read with s 30, of the
LPA.’
C
HEATON NICHOLLS
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellant:
R
Pearse SC (with S Mohammed)
Instructed
by:
Sami
Modiba Attorneys, Johannesburg
Hattingh
Attorneys Inc, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Section
24(2)
of the
Legal Practice Act provides
:
‘
(2)
The High Court must admit to practise and authorise to be enrolled
as a legal practitioner, conveyancer or notary or any person
who,
upon application, satisfies the court that he or she
(a)
is duly qualified as set out in
section 26
;
(b)
is a
(i)
South African citizen; or
(ii)
permanent resident in the Republic;
(c)
is a fit and proper person to be so admitted; and
(d)
has served a copy of the application on the Council, containing the
information as determined in the rules within
the time period
determined in the rules.’
[2]
Section 26 of the Legal Practice Act provides:
‘
(1)
A person qualifies to be admitted and enrolled as a
legal practitioner, if that person has
(a)
satisfied all the requirements for the LLB degree obtained at any
university registered in the Republic, after pursuing
for that
degree
(i)
a course of study of not less than four years; or
(ii)
a course of study of not less than five years if the LLB degree is
preceded by a bachelor's degree other than
the LLB degree, as
determined in the rules of the university in question and approved
by the Council; or
(b)
subject to section 24 (2) (
b
), satisfied all the requirements
for a law degree obtained in a foreign country, which is equivalent
to the LLB degree and recognised
by the South African Qualifications
Authority established by the National Qualifications Framework Act,
2008 (Act 67 of 2008)
; and
(c)
undergone all the practical vocational training requirements as a
candidate legal practitioner prescribed by the Minister,
including
(i)
community service as contemplated in section 29, and
(ii)
a legal practice management course for candidate legal practitioners
who intend to practise as attorneys or as
advocates referred to in
section 34 (2) (b); and
(d)
passed a competencybased examination or assessment for
candidate legal practitioners as may be determined
in the rules.
(2)
An attorney qualifies to be enrolled as a
conveyancer, if he or she has passed a competencybased
examination or assessment of conveyancers as determined in the rules
by the Council.
(3)
An attorney qualifies to be enrolled as a notary, if he or she
has passed a competencybased examination or assessment
for
notaries as determined in the rules by the Council.’
[3]
Ex
parte Tlotlego
2017
JDR 1989 (GJ).
[4]
Ibid
para 4.
[5]
Ibid paras 13-14.
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