Case Law[2023] ZASCA 19South Africa
Gaone Jack Siamisang Montshiwa (Ex Parte Application) (672/2021) [2023] ZASCA 19 (3 March 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
3 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Application for leave to appeal ─ section 17(2)(d) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 ─ leave to appeal against a decision of two judges sitting as court of first instance ─ referred for oral argument ─ order refusing leave to appeal by single judge ─ Court invoking inherent powers to consider the application ─ application dismissed with costs.
Judgment
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## Gaone Jack Siamisang Montshiwa (Ex Parte Application) (672/2021) [2023] ZASCA 19 (3 March 2023)
Gaone Jack Siamisang Montshiwa (Ex Parte Application) (672/2021) [2023] ZASCA 19 (3 March 2023)
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sino date 3 March 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA JUDGMENT
# Not Reportable
Not Reportable
Case No: 672/2021
In the ex parte
application:
GAONE JACK SIAMISANG
MONTSHIWA APPLICANT
Neutral
Citation:
Gaone Jack
Siamisang Montshiwa
(Ex
Parte
Application)
(Case no 672/2021)
[2023]
ZASCA 19
(3 March 2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA
ADP,
VAN
DER
MERWE
and
NICHOLLS
JJA
and CHETTY and SIWENDU AJJA
Heard:
18
November 2022
Delivered:
3 March 2023
Summary:
Application for leave to appeal ─
section 17(2)
(d)
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
─ leave to appeal against a
decision of two judges sitting as court of first instance ─
referred for oral argument
─ order refusing leave
to appeal by single judge ─ Court
invoking inherent powers to consider the application ─
application dismissed with
costs.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: North West Division
of the High
Court, Mahikeng
(Olivier
J
and Mbhele J, sitting as court of first instance):
The
application is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
# Siwendu AJA (Van der
Merwe JA concurring):
Siwendu AJA (Van der
Merwe JA concurring):
[1]
The
applicant, Mr Montshiwa sought to be admitted by the North West
Division of the High Court, Mahikeng (the high court) as a legal
practitioner in terms of s 24 of the Legal Practice Act No 28 of 2014
(LPA).
[1]
A
practice has developed in certain Divisions of the high court that
matters concerning the admission of legal practitioners are
heard by
two judges. Over a sustained period, Mr Montshiwa had made
disparaging allegations
against
the majority of the judges of the high court. As a result, the Judge
President of the high court specially constituted a
full bench
comprising of judges from outside the division to hear his
application for admission.
[2]
[2]
The
facts are briefly that on 1 September 2014, Mr Montshiwa entered into
a contract of articles
for
five
(5)
years
with
Mr
Lavelle
Winston
Vere
of
Vere Attorneys as his principal
[3]
while
studying towards his LLB (the first contract). He resigned from the
firm after a period of a year and 11 months. The departure
was not on
good terms. He entered into a contract of articles
with
Moetsi
Maredi Attorneys Inc, and Mr KA Moetsi was his new principal (the
second contract).
[3]
The
first contract was registered in terms of s 5(1) of the Attorneys,
Notaries and Conveyancers Act 29 of 1984 with the then Law
Society of
Bophuthatswana under contract No. 24/2014 (Bophuthatswana)
[4]
.
The second contract, regulated
by
the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979 (AA) as amended, was registered with the
Law Society of Northern Provinces on 17 May 2017 under
contract
number 1531/2017,
approximately
9 months after its conclusion.
[4]
It
bears mentioning that under the AA, unlike under the LPA, where
articles were not registered within
two
months of the commencement of service as required by s 5(3) of the
AA, a court had a discretion under s 13(2) to condone an
irregular
service
performed prior to registration, provided the service was rendered
under a valid
contract
of articles as defined in s 1 of the AA
[5]
.
To ensure continuity and a recognition of the unregistered period of
service, an applicant had to register the contract together
with the
cession of articles within two months of commencement in terms of s
11(1) of the AA. Furthermore, a principal had an obligation
to inform
the Law Society in writing of the cancellation, abandonment or
cession of the
contract.
[5]
Mr
Montshiwa left the employ of Moetsi Maredi Attorneys Inc. in March
2018. At the time of his application for admission, the LPA
had
come
into
effect, the upshot being that s 24
[6]
read
with s 26 applied to the requirements
for
his admission. These provisions prescribe the requirements for
admission and enrolment of legal practitioners in the Republic.
They
include South African citizenship, minimum
academic
qualifications, fitness for admission as a legal practitioner, and
the necessary practical vocational training
as
a candidate legal practitioner. It is the last three requirements
that became contentious in relation to Mr Montshiwa.
[6]
In his application for admission as a legal
practitioner Mr Montshiwa sought the following
order in the high court:
‘
1.
Joinder of the two contracts of articles
registered with Law Society of Bophuthatswana under article number
24/14 and the Law Society
of the Northern Provinces under the
registration number 1531/2017; Condonation for the three (3) years
and seven (7) months service
of period for articles.’
This
order was sought on the basis that the two contracts of articles
of clerkship covered the period prescribed
to qualify for admission as a legal practitioner. According to Mr
Montshiwa the contract
that he concluded with Mr Vere was registered
with the Law Society on 2 September 2014 and was interrupted when he
resigned from
Mr Vere’s employment
on
5 August 2016. The second contract was concluded with Mr Moetsi on 6
August 2016 and was registered with the Law Society ‘within
two months’ of the date of conclusion
thereof. According to Mr
Montshiwa
Mr
Vere
refused
to
sign
the
cession
of
the
first
contract
to
Mr Moetsi, hence there was no evidence in relation to the relevant
period as to whether
he
was a fit and proper
person
for admission as a legal
practitioner.
[7]
The high court found that Mr Montshiwa had
failed to explain certain discrepancies regarding the dates on which
his contracts of
articles of clerkship were concluded. It also was
not satisfied that Mr Montshiwa had met the requirement for a
structured work
course during the period of serving articles
or 12 months thereafter. The high court
found that on the evidence Mr Montshiwa was not a fit and proper
person
to be
admitted
as a
legal
practitioner.
[8]
For these reasons on 3 September 2020, in a
judgment by Olivier J (Mbhele J concurring), the high court dismissed
Mr Montshiwa’s
application for admission. Dissatisfied
with the outcome, he approached the high
court for leave to
appeal,
which
was
similarly
dismissed.
The
record
shows
that
on
29 March 2021, Mbhele J, solely considered the application for leave
to appeal and refused it in a judgment
delivered on 31 May 2021. The dismissal of the application for leave
to appeal led to a petition
to this Court.
[9]
On
26 August 2021, the application was referred for oral argument in
terms of s 17(2)
(d)
[7]
of
the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the
Superior Courts Act). Mr
Montshiwa
was
directed to address the Court on the merits of the appeal. In
addition, at the request of the Judges who considered the petition,
the
Registrar despatched a directive to the Legal Practice Council (the
LPC) to make representations on the merits of the application.
At the
hearing of the application, counsel representing the LPC referred to
the fact that
the
court that dismissed the admission application was not constituted in
the same manner as the court that heard and dismissed
the application
for leave to appeal. He argued that the application
was
not properly before this
Court.
[10]
Thus, the controversy is about whether
there is ‘a valid
decision’
refusing leave by the high court within
the
contemplation of the
Superior Courts Act, and
whether the application
is properly before this court. Put differently,
it is whether the denial of the leave to
appeal by Mbhele J, sitting as a single judge, rendered her decision
and order a nullity,
and
whether, as a consequence, this Court lacks the
j
urisdiction
to consider the application. This, in turn,
casts a shadow of doubt on the validity of the directive issued on 26
August 2021 inviting
Mr
Montshiwa to address it in terms of
s 17(2)
(d)
.
[11]
The
right to appeal to this Court is not automatic, and is regulated
by
ss
16
and 17 of the
Superior Courts Act. Audience
before this Court on
appeal is predicated
‘upon
leave having been granted’ by the court first seized with the
matter or by this Court.
[8]
Principally,
s
16(1)
(a)
(ii)
states that an appeal against the judgment of any Division as a court
of first instance lies
with
this Court if the court consisted of more than one judge. The
provisions in
s 17
apply to evaluating whether
leave
to
appeal should be granted.
[12]
Section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act
informs
the challenge
before
us and states that ‘the judge or judges’ who heard the
case at first instance may only grant leave to appeal
if they are of
the opinion that the appeal would have reasonable prospects of
success, or that there is some other compelling reason
why the appeal
should be heard. The constitution of the high court that presided
over the application
for
leave
is
determined by
s 17(2)
(a),
which reads:
‘
Leave
to appeal may be granted by the
judge or
judges
against
whose decision an appeal is to be made or,
if not readily available, by any other
judge
or judges
of the same court or Divisio
n.’ (Emphasis
added.)
[13]
Section 17(2)
(d)
prescribes the constitution of the
court which may validly consider an application for leave to appeal.
The section bestows competence
on ‘a judge or judges.’
The conclusion that the application for leave to appeal heard in
terms of
s 17(2)
(a)
is
to be heard by the same number of judges that heard the main
application is fortified by analogy of
s 14(5)
of the
Superior Courts
Act that
applies to matters heard by a full court by virtue of
s
14(6).
Section 14(5)
reads:
‘
(5)
If, at any stage during
the
hearing
of any
matter by a full
court,
any judge of such court is absent or unable to perform his or her
functions,
or if
a vacancy among the members of the court arises, that hearing
must
–
(a)
if the remaining judges constitute a
majority of the judges before whom it was commenced, proceed before
such remaining
judges;
or
(b)
if the remaining judges do not constitute
such a majority,
or if only one judge remains,
be commenced
de
novo
, unless all the parties to the
proceedings agree unconditionally in writing to accept the decision
of the majority
of
the remaining
judges
or of the one remaining
judge
as the decision
of
the court.’
[14]
The
provision provides support for the conclusion that where a matter is
heard by a full bench (two judges), leave to appeal must
be
determined
a
court that is constituted in the same manner. Importantly, in
S
v Gqeba,
[9]
this Court held that if a court is not properly constituted, the
proceedings before that court constitute a nullity.
[10]
Most
recently, in
Matamela
v Mulaudzi
[11]
the high court granted leave to appeal to this Court when special
leave should have been sought by way of application to this Court.
Answering an invitation
to
exercise its inherent
jurisdiction,
the
court,
referred
to
another
decision
by
this
Court
in
Tadvet
Industrial
(Pty)
Ltd
v
Anthea
Hanekom
&
Others,
[12]
and
held
that
the
decision of the high court was a nullity.
It
refused to entertain
the
appeal.
[15]
There
can be no doubt that an improperly brought appeal will have
repercussions for an applicant who wants to have his case finally
determined.
He
may need to re-approach the high court for proper leave
to
appeal and apply for condonation. Given the unfortunate history
alluded to above, it is not permissible for this Court to deal
with
the matter in terms of
s 17(2)
(e)
[13]
of the
Superior Courts Act. This
provision does not stand alone and
cannot be relied
upon
to leapfrog the requirement for a valid judgment or order, a
precondition for a leave to appeal. Doing so would be antithetical
not
only to the
Superior Courts Act but
to the jurisprudence of this
Court.
[16]
The
point of departure is whether despite the nullity
of
the decision by the high court, this Court has an inherent
power
under
s 173
[14]
of
the Constitution to deal with the application for leave to appeal.
The judgment by my colleague Dambuza ADP stresses that the
Constitution gives this Court the power to regulate its processes and
we should do so to prevent prejudice to Mr Montshiwa, as
the matter
would be ultimately
referred
back to it.
It
moves from the premise that an application for leave to appeal
engages the ‘procedures and processes’ of this Court.
[17]
The
first hurdle is the subsidiarity principle in
My
Vote Counts NPC v Speaker of the National Assembly
[15]
which
prohibits the direct reliance on the Constitutional provision where
national legislation has been enacted to give effect to
a right.
This
Court functions in terms of the
Superior Courts Act, the
national
legislation
envisaged
by
s 171
[16]
of
the Constitution which prescribes (a) the jurisdictional
requirements;
(b) the process and (c) the threshold for granting an application for
leave to appeal to this Court. Secondly, in
New
Clicks v Minister of Health
[17]
(
New
Clicks
)
this Court, affirmed that although ‘like the Constitutional
Court and High Courts, [it] has the inherent
power
to protect and regulate
its
own process, that “does not extend
to
the assumption of jurisdiction not conferred upon it by
statute.”’
[18]
The
circumstances in
New
Clicks
which
involved
‘a
constructive refusal’ to render a judgment by a lower court are
not comparable. The pathway through which the provisions
of the
Superior Courts Act can
be overlooked to confer this Court’s
jurisdiction absent a valid judgment by the high
court
is not defined.
[18]
Significantly,
several
decisions by this Court consistently affirm that absent leave being
granted, it lacks the jurisdiction to entertain an appeal.
[19]
The
decision in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Snyman
[20]
(
Absa
Bank
)
illustrates
this
point. There, the court confirmed another decision by this Court in
Newlands
Surgical Clinic (Pty)
Ltd
v Peninsula Eye Clinic (Pty)
Ltd
[21]
(
Newlands
)
where
under
the
rubric of an ‘inherent reservoir of power to regulate its
procedures in the interest of proper administration of justice’
the court deliberated on whether it may entertain a matter not the
subject of the order granting leave to appeal. Confirming the
often-cited decision of this Court in
Moch
v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American Express Travel Service
[22]
(
Moch
),
it held that such a power does not extend to an assumption of
jurisdiction
not
conferred upon it by statute. The upshot of these decisions, which
have not been set aside, is that this Court’s inherent
power
to regulate its affairs, condone an irregularity
or
address prejudice predominantly applies to matters regulated
by
its rules and not to matters not expressly provided by the governing
statute. Even there, the power will
be
exercised sparingly. In this instance, the prejudice Mr Montshiwa
will suffer is partly self-created as it should have been evident
to
him at the hearing of the application for leave to appeal that the
court was not properly constituted.
[19]
In sum: this Court could only have
jurisdiction
in
terms of
s 17(2)
(b)
of
the
Superior Courts Act. The
jurisdictional requirement is that leave
was refused by a properly constituted court, in fact or
constructively. As there is no
dispute that there was no constructive
refusal of leave and that the order purporting to refuse leave is a
nullity,
the
necessary jurisdictional
requirement
is absent. The improper composition of the court dealing with the
leave to appeal renders the judgment a nullity,
which cannot be sanctioned. The same
applies to the order referring the application for leave to appeal
for oral argument.
[20]
In the result I would have struck the
application from the roll with costs.
N T Y SIWENDU
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
# Dambuza ADP (Nicholls JA
and Chetty AJA concurring)
Dambuza ADP (Nicholls JA
and Chetty AJA concurring)
#
[21]
I have read the judgment prepared by my
colleague Siwendu AJA. Although I agree that the proceedings in the
application for leave
to appeal were irregular
and the consequent order of the high
court is a nullity,
I do not agree that Mr Montshiwa should be
sent back to the high court for a fresh application for leave to
appeal. In my view this
is a case in which this court should exercise
its inherent powers under s 173 of the Constitution to regulate its
process by considering
the merits of the application for leave to
appeal and, if it deems appropriate, the appeal, and make a decision
thereon.
[22]
Section 17
of the
Superior Courts Act
regulates
the
process of approaching this court to appeal against a judgment
of a Division
of
a high court. The section builds upon the provisions of
s
16(1)
(a)
(ii)
of the same Act which confers appeal jurisdiction on this court and
regulates the process of exercising the right of appeal
as follows:
‘
(a)
an appeal against
any decision of a Division
as a court of first instance
lies; upon leave having
been granted
–
(i)
. . .
(ii)
.
. .
if the court
consisted of more than one judge, to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[23]
Section 17(1) prescribes the threshold that
must be met for an appeal to be heard by this court. Section
17(2)
(b)
,
in terms of which Mr Montshiwa approached this court, provides
opportunity to an applicant whose application for leave to appeal
under s 17(1) has been refused, to approach this court for the same
purpose.
[24]
The
purpose for the threshold and procedure laid
out
in s 17 is to regulate the appeal process in this court for the
court’s benefit, by ensuring that this court’s resources
are not wasted on meritless appeals or cases that are not
sufficiently important to occupy the attention of this court. Hence
the following
remarks
by Chaskalson CJ in
Minister
of Health and Another
v
New
Clicks
South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others
(
New
Clicks South Africa
):
[23]
‘
The
granting of leave to appeal by an appeal court in such circumstances
[where there had been unreasonable delay in rendering a
judgment
on
an application
for
leave to appeal] does not cause any prejudice. If the application
for
leave had been dismissed by the lower court the litigant
would
have been entitled as of right to apply to the appeal court for
leave. The only prejudice caused is to the appeal court which
will
have been burdened with an unnecessary application
in
cases where the lower court would have given leave in any event’.
[24]
[25]
The underlying
principle is that courts are bestowed with
inherent powers to administer justice, including avoidance of
multiple
fruitless
court proceedings between the same parties. Under the first judgment
Mr Montshiwa must return to the high court for that
court to comply
with the relevant
statutory
prescriptions. Whatever judgment the reconstituted high court will
render, the matter will,
in
all probability, return to this court, either for a further
application for leave to appeal or for an appeal. All this in
circumstances
where Mr Montshiwa did comply with the requirements
under the
Superior Courts Act in
relation
to the application for leave to appeal
process. It seems to me that grave injustice
will
result
from such a judgment, and the waste of both his and the courts’
resources will be completely unjustified.
[26]
Recently
this court has exercised its authority to override irregularities
occasioned in the application for leave
to
appeal process. Apart from
New
Clicks South Africa,
in
National
Credit Regulator v Lewis Stores (Pty) Ltd
[25]
it did so in circumstances where leave had incorrectly not been
sought from the court of first instance. Instead, leave
had
been sought and granted by this Court on the basis that the applicant
had to prove special circumstances justifying
the
grant of leave to appeal. The correct standard was that of reasonable
prospects of success.
[26]
This
court held that to strike the appeal from the roll, only for the
appellants to retrace their steps to the high court for leave
to
appeal and, if refused leave, back to this Court for a repeat hearing
of an issue that had been fully argued would be a gross
technicality
and
waste of resources.
[27]
Indeed,
as illustrated
in
the following
judgments
of this court, the courts’ reservoir of power to regulate
its
process and procedure in the interests
of
proper administration
may
not be used by the court to appropriate to itself jurisdiction that
is not conferred to it by statute or where a statute grants
exclusive
jurisdiction to another court.
[27]
In
Moch
this
Court refused to hear an appeal against a provisional sequestration
order because no leave
had
been sought from the court which granted that order. In addition,
s
150
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
precluded an appeal against a
provisional sequestration order.
In
this case however, leave to appeal was sought by Mr Montshiwa in the
court of first instance, and the appeal jurisdiction of
this Court is
not excluded in respect of the subject of the dispute between the
parties.
[28]
This
application is also distinguishable
from
Matamela
v Mulaudzi
[28]
in
a number
of
respects. In that
case
the
full
court
had
removed
the
appeal from its court roll, leaving
in
place only the order of eviction granted by the magistrates court.
The appeal was only against the ruling
removing
the appeal from the full court roll. The magistrates court order
could not be appealed in this Court. Further, in that
case this court
did not have before it an application for leave
to
appeal. In addition, the appellant was at fault in having brought an
application for leave
to
appeal in the incorrect court.
[29]
In
Newlands
[29]
the
high court had granted leave to appeal on only one of two issues in
respect of which leave had been sought. On appeal the appellant
urged
this court to consider its submissions on the second issue as well.
This
Court refused to do so on the basis that its jurisdiction on appeal
was limited
to
the grounds on which leave to appeal has been granted. Importantly,
no application for leave
to
appeal had been brought in the court of first instance on the second
issue.
[30]
In
Social
Justice Coalition and Others v Minister of Police and Others
[30]
there had been a delay in the granting
of
a relief
by
the Equality
Court,
although the court had already given a judgment and a declarator that
a system employed by the SAPS to allocate human resources
in the
Western Cape unfairly discriminated
against
black and poor people. The applicants had also sought orders that the
Provincial Commissioner of Police had the power to
determine the
distribution of police resources between stations within the
province. The Equality Court refused to grant the full
extent of the
order sought on the basis that it did not have sufficient
evidence
on that aspect. It then postponed the hearing on the remedy to a date
that was to be arranged between the parties. In the
intervening
appeal
the Constitutional Court distinguished
the
court order granted by the Equality Court from
New
Clicks
and
held that the court’s power to regulate its own processes did
not extend to making decisions in respect of matters pending
in other
courts.
[31]
[31]
A
distinction must also be drawn between this case and
S
v Malindi
[32]
wherein
this
court set aside the decision of a criminal
trial
court because of the dismissal of an assessor during the course of
the trial.
This
Court found that the change in the constitution of the court to have
been grossly irregular.
Unlike
in
this case, the court in
Malindi
was
not concerned with a process that was intended for the courts’
benefit. The prescribed court constitution was intended
for the
benefit of the accused. As discussed earlier,
no
prejudice will
be
suffered by Mr Montshiwa in this case if this court considers this
application for leave to appeal. On the other hand, the prejudice
resulting from re-starting the leave to appeal process is manifest.
[32]
The
submission on behalf of the LPC that consideration and adjudication
of this application would amount to stultification
of
the clear vision of the
s 17
and would lead to the opening of doors
to litigants
to
approach this court directly without a prior application to the court
of first instance is not persuasive. The peculiar circumstances
of
this case have been discussed, including the irregularity
attributable to the court, and the absurdity that would result if
Mr
Montshiwa would be denied audience by this Court. Indeed, the courts
have cautioned that the power provided for under s 173
of the
Constitution must be exercised sparingly and carefully in instances
where, otherwise grave injustice would result.
[33]
I
am satisfied that this is a proper case where such power should be
exercised.
[33]
Has
Mr Montshiwa then made out a proper case for an order granting
leave
to appeal? I am not persuaded that another court would reach a
different decision from that of the high court. The requirements
specified
in the LPA for admission as a legal practitioner are set out in the
first judgment.
The
courts in this country and elsewhere have identified
certain
qualities
for
a fit and proper person as envisaged in the LPA. These include
integrity,
hard
work, dignity, honesty, fairness
and
respect for legal
order.
[34]
[34]
The expression ‘fit and proper’
is not defined in the LPA. There is also no single test for
determination of what constitutes
a fit and proper person for
purposes of admission into the legal profession. Section 5 of the
LPA, however, sets out one of the
objectives of the Act as to ‘
determine, enhance and maintain appropriate standards of professional
practice and ethical
conduct of all legal practitioners
and
all
candidate
legal
practitioners’.
In
terms
of s 24(2)
(c)
of the LPA only fit and proper persons
may be admitted
by
courts as legal practitioners.
[35]
In
Australian
Broadcasting Tribunal v Bond
[35]
the
court described the expression fit and proper as follows:
‘
The
expression “fit and proper person”, standing alone,
carries no precise meaning. It takes its meaning
from
context, from the activities
the
person is or will
be
engaged
in
and the ends to be served by those activities.
The
concept of ‘fit and proper’ cannot be entirely
divorced
from the conduct of the person who is or will be engaging in those
activities.
However,
depending on the nature of those activities,
the
question may be whether improper conduct has occurred, whether it is
likely
to
occur, whether it can be assumed that it will not occur, or whether
the general community will have confidence
that
it will not occur. The list is not exhaustive
but
it indicates
that,
in
certain
contexts,
character
(because
it
provides
indication
of
likely
future
conduct) may be sufficient
to
ground a finding
that
a person is not fit and proper to undertake the activities
in
question.’
[36]
[36]
As
a legal practitioner and an officer of the court Mr Montshiwa would
be expected to conduct himself with the highest degree of
integrity,
to
ensure that the dignity and decorum of the court is maintained
and
to have the highest respect for legal order. Insulting, vulgar and
disparaging language by a legal practitioner cannot be tolerated.
‘The effective functioning of our courts and the proper
administration of justice are highly dependent on how legal
practitioners
go about discharging [their
duty
to the court].’
[37]
[37]
As it appears from the record, apart from
the discrepancies relating to his vocational training,
Mr Montshiwa’s conduct, as
demonstrated throughout his application for admission as a legal
practitioner, and prior thereto,
falls far short of the degree of
integrity,
dignity,
honesty and respect expected of an officer
of the court. The LPC referred
to
numerous
instances
of conduct that has no place in the application for admission as a
legal practitioner.
It
is apparent from these that Mr Montshiwa’s
appreciation
of
the processes, procedures, and decorum of our courts is woefully
deficient. When Mr Jerry Sithole, an attorney practicing in
Mmabatho,
filed a notice to oppose his application for admission, Mr Montshiwa
responded with an ‘Opposing affidavit
to the Notice to Oppose’ in which he
contended that Mr Sithole’s opposition was premature, resulted
from ‘bitterness
and stupidity’, and was an ‘idiotic
move . . . motivated by stupidity’.
[38]
In addition, when Mr J Nkomo, another
attorney from Mmabatho, filed an application to intervene in the
proceedings before the high
court,
in
order
to place on
record certain conduct by Mr Montshiwa in the maintenance
court, the latter referred to Mr Nkomo’s
application as ‘idiotic’, ‘barbaric’ and
exhibiting the level
of substance expected from ‘a passionate
first year law student’. Mr Montshiwa also addressed a letter
to the Minister
of Justice and Correctional Services requesting him
to establish a Commission of Enquiry to investigate
the relationship
‘between Mr Nkomo and the North West
High
Court
Bench.’
[39]
The
Judge President of the North West Division of the High Court at the
time, Madame Leeuw JP was not spared from Mr Montshiwa’s
tirade. Mr Montshiwa berated the JP for constituting a Full Bench of
judges from outside her Division. He complained that the JP’s
leadership was ‘a mockery’ and undertook to ensure that
‘Mashangu Leeuw JP, my enemy will never get away with
any
unlawful
conduct
that she may try.’
[40]
The papers filed
by Mr Nkomo and Mr Sithole revealed
Mr Montshiwa’s personal attacks on
the Judge President and a criminal complaint that he laid against
her. The removal of his
application for admission from high the court
roll on 20 March 2022 by Pietersen AJ led to a complaint
by Mr Montshiwa against the judge to the
Minister of Justice and the Judicial
Services Commission. Mr Montshiwa also
directed insults at the judges who heard his application for
admission and accused them of
bias and collusion with the Judge
President against him.
[41]
His vitriolic
attacks did not only dominate the
proceedings in the high court. In this Court, Mr Montshiwa demanded
an explanation from the two
judges who directed that the LPC
participate in this application for leave to appeal. He castigated Ms
Dineo Motaung for the contents
of the affidavit filed
on behalf of the LPC. All this conduct
demonstrates his lack of appreciation of the ethos and principles
that govern the legal
profession
and the courts of this country.
[42]
Mr Montshiwa does not dispute the conduct
and utterances attributed to him. He only maintains
that his conduct is not inappropriate. That
cannot be so. His conduct demonstrates a predisposition to bouts of
extreme anger and
disrespect. Against this background no other court
would find differently from the decision of the high
court.
[43]
Consequently,
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs.
N
DAMBUZA
ACTING
DEPUTY
PRESIDENT
Appearances
For Applicant: In
person
For
LPC: T
Tshavhungwa
Instructed
by:
Damons
Magardie
Richardson
Attorneys, Pretoria
Phatshoane Henney
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Section
24(1) provides:
‘
A
person may only practise as a legal practitioner if he or she is
admitted and enrolled to practise as such in terms of this
Act.’
[2]
Section
14(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
provides;
‘
Save
as provided for in this Act or any other law, a court of a Division
must be constituted before a single judge when sitting
as a court of
first instance for the hearing of any civil matter, but the Judge
President or, in the absence of both the Judge
President and the
Deputy Judge President, the senior available judge, may at any time
direct that any matter be heard by a court
consisting of not more
than three judges, as he or she may determine.’
[3]
Mr
Montshiwa matriculated from Mascom Training College in 2010 and
thereafter enrolled for a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) at the University
of South Africa (Unisa). He also applied for a certificate of full
exemption in terms of section 7(1)
(e)
of
Act 61 of 1995, which was issued with effect from 1 January 2011.
[4]
That
Act has since been repealed by section 100 of the Compensation for
Occupational Injuries and Diseases
Act
130 of 1993.
[5]
Ex
Parte Gird (Prokureursorde, Transvaal, Toetredend)
SA
1985 (3) SA 514
(T);
Ex
Parte Singer: Law Society, Transvaal, Intervening
1984
(2) SA 757
(A )
[6]
Section
24(2) provides:
‘
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.’
[7]
Section
17(2)(
d
)
provides that:
‘
The
judges considering an application referred to in paragraph
(b)
may dispose of the application without
the hearing of oral argument, but may, if they are of the opinion
that the circumstances
so require, order that it be argued before
them at a time and place appointed, and may, whether or not they
have so ordered,
grant or refuse the application or refer it to the
court for consideration.’
[8]
Section
16(1).
[9]
S
v Gqeba & Others
[1989]
ZASCA 60
;
1989 (3) SA 712
(A). After one of the assessors was
relieved from duty and the appeal, the court set aside a conviction
and sentence on account
of the fact that the judgement handed out
was not properly authorised by the section.
[10]
See
also S v Malindi & Others
[1989] ZASCA 114
;
1990 (1) SA 962
(AD);
[1990] 4 All SA 433
(AD).
[11]
Matamela
v Mulaudzi
[2022]
ZASCA 71.
[12]
Tadvet
Industrial (Pty) Ltd v Anthea Hanekom & Others
[2019] ZASCA 19
para 8.
[13]
Section
17(2)
(e)
provides:
‘
Where
an application has been referred to the court in terms of paragraph
(d), the court may thereupon grant or refuse it.’
[14]
Section
173 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa ,1996,
(Constitution) provides:
‘
The
Constitutional Court, Supreme Court of Appeal and High Courts each
has the inherent power to protect and regulate their own
process,
and to develop the common law, taking into account the interests of
justice.’
[15]
My
Vote Counts NPC v Speaker of the National Assembly
[2015] ZACC 31
;
2016 (1) SA 132
(CC) para 54: ‘. . . where legislation has
been enacted to give effect to a right, a litigant should rely on
that legislation
in order to give effect to the right or
alternatively challenge the legislation as being inconsistent with
the Constitution.’
[16]
Section
171 of the Constitution provides:
‘
All
courts function in terms of national legislation, and their rules
and procedures must be prov ided for in terms of national
legislation.’
[17]
Pharmaceutical
Society of South Africa and Others v Minister of Health and Another;
New Clicks South Africa (Pty) Limited v Tshabalala-Msimang
and
Another
[2004] ZASCA 122
;
2005 3 SA 238
SCA.
[18]
Ibid
para 19.
[19]
Section
16(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act; see
also, Absa Bank Ltd v Snyman
[2015] ZASCA 67
;
[2015] 3 All SA 1
(SCA);
2015 (4) SA 329
(SCA)
(Absa Bank ) at para 10.
[20]
Ibid
Absa Bank .
[21]
Newlands
Surgical Clinic (Pty) Ltd v Pennisula Eye Clinic (Pty) Ltd
[2015]
ZASCA 25
;
2015 (4) SA 34
(SCA) (Newlands) paras 12-14. The Court in
Newlands quoted Hefer JA in Moch v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American
Express Travel
Service
1996 (3) SA 1
(A).
[22]
Moch
v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American Express Travel Service [1996]
ZASCA 2; 1996 (3) SA 1 (SCA).
[23]
Minister
of Health and Another v New Clicks South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2005] ZACC 14; 2006 (2) SA 311 (CC).
[24]
Ibid
para 70.
[25]
The
National Credit Regulator v Lewis Stores (Pty) Ltd [2019] ZASCA 190;
2020 (2) SA 390 (SCA)
[26]
Ibid
para 58.
[27]
Snyders
v De Jager
[2015] ZASCA 137
;
2016 (5) SA 218
SCA.
[28]
See
footnotes 11 and 23 of the first judgment.
[29]
See
footnote 21 above.
[30]
Social
Justice Coalition and Others v Minister of Police and Others
[2022]
ZACC 27
;
2022 (10) BCLR 1267
(CC) This judgment was recently handed
down on 19 July 2022
[31]
Ibid
para 87.
[32]
S
v Malindi and Others [1989] ZASCA 175; [1990] 4 All SA 433 (AD).
[33]
Enyati
Colliery Ltd & Another v Alleson
1922 AD 24
at 32.
[34]
General
Council of the Bar of South Africa v Jiba and Another [2019] ZACC
23; 2019 (8) BCLR 919 (CC).
[35]
Australian
Broadcasting Tribunal v Bond [1990] HCA 33; (1990) 170 CLR 321.
[36]
Ibid
para 36.
[37]
R
Seegobin ‘Restoring dignity to our courts: the duties of legal
practitioners ’ 14 September 2022 Groundup. Available
at
https://www.groundup.org.za/article/restoring-dignity-to-our-courts-the-duties-legal-
practitioners/. Accessed on 16 February 2023.
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