Case Law[2023] ZASCA 112South Africa
Limpopo Provincial Council of the South African Legal Practice Council v Chueu Incorporated Attorneys and Others (459/22) [2023] ZASCA 112 (26 July 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 – whether financial misconduct of one director of law firm invokes liability of all directors – every director has a fiduciary duty towards the company of which it is a director – ignorance of financial matters when faced with allegations of misappropriation does not absolve other directors.
Judgment
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## Limpopo Provincial Council of the South African Legal Practice Council v Chueu Incorporated Attorneys and Others (459/22) [2023] ZASCA 112 (26 July 2023)
Limpopo Provincial Council of the South African Legal Practice Council v Chueu Incorporated Attorneys and Others (459/22) [2023] ZASCA 112 (26 July 2023)
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sino date 26 July 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 459/2022
In the matter between:
LIMPOPO PROVINCIAL
COUNCIL OF THE
SOUTH
AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
APPELLANT
and
CHUEU
INCORPORATED ATTORNEYS
FIRST RESPONDENT
CHUPJANA LEKOLOANA
CHUEU SECOND
RESPONDENT
THABO MILTON
CHUEU
THIRD RESPONDENT
BRIAN KINGLY KEABETSOE
KOOPEDI FOURTH
RESPONDENT
CHARLES KGOMOTSO TSOKU
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
SEKGAPINYE
TSETSEWA SIXTH
RESPONDENT
PHELADI RAESIBE
GWANGWA
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
PASCALIA NONHLANHLA
MATHIBELA EIGHTH RESPONDENT
TSOKU CHUEU
INCORPORATED ATTORNEYS NINTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Limpopo Provincial
Council of the South African Legal Practice Council v Chueu
Incorporated Attorneys and Others
(459/22)
[2023] ZASCA 112
(26 July 2023)
Coram:
SALDULKER, NICHOLLS and CARELSE JJA and
NHLANGULELA and MALI AJJA
Heard:
8 May 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email. Publication was
made on the Supreme Court
of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be at 11h00 on
26 July 2023.
Summary:
Civil procedure –
Legal Practice Act 28 of
2014
– whether financial misconduct of one director of law firm
invokes liability of all directors – every director has a
fiduciary duty towards the company of which it is a director –
ignorance of financial matters when faced with allegations
of
misappropriation does not absolve other directors.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Limpopo Division of the
High Court, Polokwane (Naude AJ, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The
appeal is upheld with no order as to costs.
2
The
order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
1
The third to eighth respondents are suspended from practicing as
attorneys for a period of
six months pending the finalisation of
investigations into their conduct as directors of the first
respondent, failing which the
suspension will lapse.
2
The third to eighth respondents are ordered to hand over and deliver
their certificates
of enrolment as legal practitioners to the
Registrar of the Limpopo Division of the High Court, Polokwane within
7 days from date
of this order.
3
In the event of the third to eighth respondents failing to comply
with the terms of
the order granted in paragraph 2 above, within 7
days from date of this order, the Sheriff of the district in which
the third to
eighth respondents’ certificates of enrolment are
found, is authorised and directed to take possession of the said
certificates
and to hand them to the applicant.
4
The Director of the Limpopo Provincial Council of the applicant,
Khomotso Matsaung,
or any person nominated by her, and/or the
Director of the Gauteng Provincial Council of the South African Legal
Practice Council,
Johan van Staden, or any person nominated by him,
is appointed
curator bonis
to administer and control the trust
accounts of the third to eighth respondents, including accounts
relating to insolvent and deceased
estates and any deceased estate
and any estate under curatorship connected with the respondents’
practices as legal practitioners,
including the separate banking
accounts opened and kept by the third to ninth respondents at any
bank in the Republic of South
Africa in terms of
section 86(1)
and
(2) of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
, in which monies from such
trust banking accounts have been invested by virtue of the provisions
of the said subsections, or in
which monies in any manner have been
deposited or credited (the said accounts being hereafter referred to
as “the trust accounts”),
with the following powers and
duties:
4.1
immediately to take possession of the third to eighth respondents’
accounting records, records,
files and, subject to the approval of
the Board of Control of the Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund, to
sign all forms and generally
operate the trust accounts, but only to
such extent and for such purpose as may be necessary to bring to
completion current transactions
in which the third to eighth
respondents were acting at the date of this order.
4.2
subject to the approval and control of the Board of Control of the
Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund
and where monies had been paid
incorrectly and unlawfully from the undermentioned trust accounts, to
recover and receive and, if
necessary in the interests of persons
having lawful claims upon the trust account(s) and/or against the
third to ninth respondents
in respect of monies held, received and/or
invested by the respondents in terms of
section 86(1)
and (2) and/or
section 86(3)
and/or section 86(4) of the Legal Practice Act 28 of
2014 (hereinafter referred to as “trust monies”), to take
any
legal proceedings which may be necessary for the recovery of
money which may be due to such persons in respect of incomplete
transactions,
if any, in which the third to eighth respondents were
and may still have been concerned and to receive such monies and to
pay the
same to the credit of the trust account(s);
4.3
to ascertain from the third to eighth respondents’ accounting
records the names of all persons
on whose account the third to eighth
respondents appear to hold or to have received trust monies from
(hereinafter referred to
as “trust creditors”) and to
call upon the third to eighth respondents to furnish them, within 30
(thirty) days of
the date of service of this order or such further
period as they may agree to in writing, with the names, addresses and
amounts
due to all trust creditors;
4.4
to call upon such trust creditors to furnish such proof, information
and/or affidavits as they may require,
to enable them, acting in
consultation with, and subject to the requirements of, the Board of
Control of the Legal Practitioners
Fidelity Fund, to determine
whether any such trust creditor has a claim in respect of monies in
the trust account(s) of the respondents
and, if so, the amount of
such claim;
4.5
to admit or reject, in whole or in part, subject to the approval of
the Board of Control of the Legal
Practitioners Fidelity Fund, the
claims of any such trust creditor or creditors, without prejudice to
such trust creditor’s
or creditors’ right of access to
the civil courts;
4.6
having determined the amounts which she considers are lawfully due to
trust creditors, to pay such claims
in full, but subject always to
the approval of the Board of Control of the Legal Practitioners
Fidelity Fund;
4.7
in the event of there being any surplus in the trust account(s) of
the third to eighth respondents after
payment of the admitted claims
of all trust creditors in full, to utilise such surplus to settle or
reduce (as the case may
be), firstly, any claim of the Legal
Practitioners Fidelity Fund in terms of
section 86(5)
of the
Legal
Practice Act 28 of 2014
in respect of any interest therein referred
to and, secondly, without prejudice to the rights of the creditors of
the respondents,
the costs, fees and expenses referred to in
paragraph 10 hereunder, or such portion thereof as has not already
been separately
paid by the third to eighth respondents to the
applicant, and, if there is any balance left over after payment in
full of such
claims, costs, fees and expenses, to pay such balance,
subject to the approval of the Board of Control of the Legal
Practitioners
Fidelity Fund, to the third to eighth respondents, if
they are solvent, or, if the third to eighth respondents are
insolvent, to
the trustee(s) of the third to eighth respondents’
insolvent estates;
4.8
in the event of there being insufficient trust monies in the trust
banking account(s) of the third to
eighth respondents, in accordance
with the available documentation and information, to pay in full the
claims of trust creditors
who have lodged claims for repayment and
whose claims have been approved, to distribute the credit balance(s)
which may be available
in the trust banking account(s) amongst the
trust creditors, alternatively to pay the balance to the Legal
Practitioners Fidelity
Fund;
4.9
subject to the approval of the chairman of the Board of Control of
the Legal Practitioners Fidelity
Fund, to appoint nominees or
representatives and/or consult with and/or engage the services of
legal practitioners, counsel, accountants
and/or any other persons,
where considered necessary, to assist them in carrying out their
duties as curators; and
4.10 to
render from time to time, as curators, returns to the Board of
Control of the Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund
showing how the
trust account(s) of the third to eighth respondents has/have been
dealt with until such time as the Board of Control
of the Legal
Practitioners Fidelity Fund notifies them that they may regard their
duties as curators terminated.
5
That the third to eighth respondents immediately deliver their
accounting records, records,
files and documents containing
particulars and information relating to:
5.1
any monies received, held or paid by the third to eighth respondents
for or on account of any person
while practicing as an attorney;
5.2
any monies invested by the third to eighth respondents in terms of
section 86(3)
and/or
section 86(4)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of
2014
;
5.3
any interest on monies so invested which was paid over or credited to
the third to eighth respondents;
5.4
any estate of a deceased person or an insolvent estate or an estate
under curatorship administered by
the third to eighth respondents,
whether as executor or trustee or curator or on behalf of the
executor, trustee or curator;
5.5
any insolvent estate administered by the third to eighth respondents
as trustee or on behalf of the
trustee in terms of the
Insolvency Act
24 of 1936
;
5.6
any trust administered by the third to eighth respondents as trustee
or on behalf of the trustee in
terms of the Trust Property Control
Act 57 of 1988;
5.7
any company liquidated in terms of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 read
together with the provisions of
the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
,
administered by the third to eighth respondents by or on behalf of
the liquidator;
5.8
any close corporation liquidated in terms of the
Close Corporations
Act 69 of 1984
, administered by the third to eighth respondents as or
on behalf of the liquidator; and
5.9
the third to eighth respondents’ practices as legal
practitioners of the Limpopo Division of the
High Court, Polokwane,
to the curators so appointed, provided that, as far as such
accounting records, records, files and documents
are concerned, the
third to eighth respondents shall be entitled to have reasonable
access to such records, but always subject
to the supervision of such
curator or their nominee.
6
Should the third to eighth respondents fail to comply with the
provisions of the preceding
paragraphs of this order on service
thereof upon them or after a return by the person entrusted with the
service thereof that he
or she has been unable to effect service
thereof on the third to eighth respondents (as the case may be), the
Sheriff for the district
in which such accounting records, records,
files and documents are, be empowered and directed to search for and
to take possession
thereof, wherever they may be, and to deliver them
to such curator.
7
That the curator shall be entitled to:
7.1
hand over to the persons entitled thereto all such records, files and
documents provided that a satisfactory
written undertaking had been
received from such persons to pay any amount, either determined on
taxation or by agreement, in respect
of fees and disbursements due to
the firm;
7.2
require from the persons referred to in paragraph 7.1 to provide any
such documentation or information
which they may consider relevant in
respect of a claim or possible or anticipated claim, against them
and/or the third to eighth
respondents and/or the third to eighth
respondents’ clients and/or the Legal Practitioners Fidelity
Fund in respect of money
and/or other property entrusted to the third
to eighth respondents. Provided that any person entitled thereto
shall be granted
reasonable access thereto and shall be permitted to
make copies thereof;
7.3
publish this order or an abridged version thereof in any newspaper
they consider appropriate; and
7.4
wind-up the third to eighth respondents’ practices in the event
that they consider it appropriate.
8
The third to eighth respondents are hereby removed from office as:
8.1
executor of any estate of which the third to eighth respondents have
been appointed in terms of
section 54(1)
(a)
(v) of the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
or the estate of any other
person referred to in
section 72(1)
;
1.25cm; margin-bottom: 0cm; line-height: 150%">
8.2
curators or guardians of any minor or other person’s property
in terms of
section 72(1)
read with
section 54(1)
(a)
(v) and
section 85
of the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
;
8.3
trustees of any insolvent estate in terms of
section 59
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
;
8.4
liquidators of any company in terms of
section 379(2)
read with
section 379
(e)
of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 read together
with the provisions of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
;
8.5
trustees of any trust in terms of section 20(1) of the Trust Property
Control Act 57 of 1988;
8.6
liquidators of any close corporation appointed in terms of
section 74
of the
Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984
; and
8.7
administrators appointed in terms of section 74 of the Magistrates’
Court Act 32 of 1944.
9
The third to eighth respondents are hereby ordered and directed,
jointly and severally,
to:
9.1
pay in terms of
section 87(2)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
,
the reasonable costs of the inspection of the accounting records of
the respondents;
9.2
pay the reasonable fees of the auditor engaged by the applicant;
9.3
pay the reasonable fees and expenses of the curator, including
travelling time;
9.4
pay the reasonable fees and expenses of any person(s) consulted
and/or engaged by the curator as aforesaid;
and
9.5
pay the expenses relating to the publication of this order or an
abbreviated version thereof.
10
If there are any trust funds available, the third to eighth
respondents shall within 6 (six) months
after having been requested
to do so by the curators, or within such longer period as the
curators may agree to in writing, satisfy
the curators, by means of
the submission of taxed bills of costs or otherwise, of the amount of
the fees and disbursements due
to them (third to eighth respondents)
in respect of their (former) legal practices, and should they fail to
do so, they shall not
be entitled to recover such fees and
disbursements from the curators without prejudice, however, to such
rights (if any) as
they may have against the trust creditor(s)
concerned for payment or recovery thereof.
11
A certificate issued by a Director of the Legal Practitioners
Fidelity Fund shall constitute
prima facie
proof of the
curators’ costs and that the Registrar be authorised to issue a
writ of execution on the strength of such certificate
in order to
collect the curators’ costs.
12
The third to eighth respondents shall during the period of suspension
comply with the provisions
of
sections 84(1)
and
85
of the
Legal
Practice Act 28 of 2014
.
13
The third to eighth respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this
application, jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be
absolved.’
JUDGMENT
Nicholls JA (Saldulker
and Carelse JJA and Nhlangulela and Mali AJJA concurring):
[1]
On 25 October 2021, the Limpopo Division of
the High Court, Polokwane (the high court) dismissed an urgent
application for the suspension
of various legal practitioners,
brought by the statutory regulator, the Limpopo Provincial Council of
the South African Legal Practice
Council (the Limpopo LPC), the
appellant before us. The first respondent is Chueu Incorporated
Attorneys (the firm), the law firm
of which the second to eighth
respondents were directors. The Limpopo LPC sought to suspend the
second to eighth respondents from
practising as attorneys for a
period of 18 months pending the finalisation of a disciplinary
enquiry into the alleged misconduct
of the respondents, and certain
interim relief related thereto.
[2]
At the time, the firm was facing a final
liquidation application. The high court, by agreement, granted an
order of suspension against
the second respondent for a period of 12
months, pending the finalisation of investigations into his conduct
and disciplinary proceedings
against him. It dismissed the
application for the suspension of the other directors. This prompted
the Limpopo LPC to bring an
application for leave to appeal in
respect of the other six directors, the third to eighth respondents.
The high court dismissed
the application for leave to appeal, and
granted a punitive costs order against the Limpopo LPC. Special leave
to appeal was sought,
and granted, by this Court.
[3]
At the heart of this appeal is the question
of the liability of all the directors of a law firm, when the
financial misconduct has
allegedly been committed by only one of the
directors.
[4]
Legal
practitioners are obliged to conduct themselves with the utmost
integrity and scrupulous honesty. Public confidence in the
legal
profession is enhanced by maintaining the highest ethical standards.
A lack of trust in the legal profession goes hand in
hand with the
erosion of the rule of law. The Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 (the
LPA) replaced the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979 and
came into operation on
1 November 2018. Like its predecessor, the objects of the LPA are,
inter alia, to promote and protect the
public interest and to enhance
and maintain appropriate standards of professional and ethical
conduct of all legal practitioners.
[1]
As such, the Limpopo LPC is not an ordinary litigant, but generally
acts for the public good. Legal proceedings brought by the
Limpopo
LPC in this regard are
sui
generis
,
[2]
and the disciplinary powers of the high court over the legal
practitioners are founded in its inherent jurisdiction as the
ultimate
custos
morum
of the legal profession.
[3]
[5]
In terms of the LPA, practitioners may
establish private companies to conduct their legal practice, subject
to certain conditions.
Section 34(7) provides:
‘
A
commercial juristic entity may be established to conduct a legal
practice provided that, in terms of its founding documents-
(a)
. . .
(b)
. . .
(c)
all present and past shareholders,
partners or members, as the case may be, are liable jointly and
severally together with the commercial
juristic entity for-
(i)
the debts and liabilities of the commercial
juristic entity as are or were contracted during their period of
office; and
(ii)
in respect of any theft committed during
their period of office.’
In this regard, the third
to eighth respondents do not deny their liability for the debts of
the firm, but contend that they should
not be subjected to
disciplinary measures for the financial misconduct of another
director, the second respondent.
[6]
The firm, which had been registered as a
partnership since 1998, was incorporated in 2014. According to the
second respondent, it
was handling approximately 6 000 files, with an
estimated gross value of R6.2 billion, when the application for
suspension was
launched. The firm specialised in personal injury
matters. It had four offices, in Lephalale, Pretoria, Polokwane and
Mahikeng,
all of which operated independently of each other. The
second respondent was the ‘managing director’ of the firm
and
in charge of the overall finances of the firm. During the
relevant period, the third to eighth respondents were directors of
the
firm, operating at different locations. The third and fifth
respondents worked at the Pretoria office. The fourth, seventh and
eighth respondents were stationed at Lephalale, and the sixth
respondent at Polokwane.
[7]
During 2020/2021, various complaints from
members of the public were received by the Limpopo LPC. These were to
the effect that
the firm had represented them in litigation against
the Road Accident Fund (the RAF), collected monies from the RAF, but
failed
to pay it over; that the firm had failed to account for monies
claimed and received from the RAF; and, had failed to respond to
communications or deal properly with clients’ instructions in
this regard.
[8]
The first complaint,
by Ms Puleng
Jowie Mugwena,
was that the client had been
awarded R377 522.91 plus costs by the high court, but no account had
been rendered and no monies paid
to her. The second complaint,
by
Ms Rebone Evelina Motlhabane and lodged with the Limpopo LPC on 9
October 2020,
was by a client of the third
respondent in Lephalale who was awarded R1 251 978.25 by
the high court. She received a statement
that an amount of
R938 983.69 was due to her after the deduction of fees. She did
not receive any payment. The third complaint,
by Mr Pakiso
Aron Boye,
also emanating from the
Lephalale office, was in regard to an award of R857 602 that had
been ordered by the high court. The
RAF had paid the firm, but no
account was rendered to the client and no payment made to him. The
fourth and fifth complaints were
made by
Mr Serole Gift
Mapaya
and
Ms Tumelo Enny Makoti
respectively, both
clients of the Lephalale
office. The former related to monies which had been claimed and paid
out by the RAF, but were not accounted
for, nor paid over to the
clients. Ms Makoti stated that she had instructed the firm to pursue
a claim against the RAF for R8 100 000
which they had taken
over from another attorney. The firm did not respond to her queries
and did not account to her. The claim
subsequently became prescribed.
[9]
In addition to the above, the Limpopo LPC
was informed by the Gauteng LPC about a complaint received from the
RAF, that it had erroneously
made a duplicate payment to the firm.
This resulted in an overpayment to the firm in an amount of
R29 043 606.64, which
monies, instead of being repaid to
the RAF, had been appropriated by the firm.
[10]
The matter was referred to the
Investigating Committee of the Limpopo LPC,
which
found evidence of numerous breaches of the code of conduct including,
inter
alia, failure to account
accurately and timeously; failure to respond to complainants’
communications; failure to deal properly
with instructions of
clients; failure to comply with the directives of the Limpopo LPC;
failure to exercise proper control and
supervision over staff;
failure to report to the LPC; and dishonest and irregular conduct on
the part of a trust practitioner in
relation to the handling of trust
monies.
[11]
Charges were then formulated against the
directors of the firm, the second to eighth respondents. On the day
of the disciplinary
hearing, the directors did not arrive, although
an advocate was present who purported to act for them. The
respondents did not
answer the complaints against them, which had
grown to 26 in number by the time that the Limpopo LPC instituted
action in September
2021.
[12]
On receipt of the trust accounts of the
firm, the Limpopo LPC’s investigation team ascertained that
there was an amount in
trust of R8 006 186.94 on 15 May
2021. This was reduced to R5 545 013.84 on 1 September
2021. Bearing
in mind the duplicate payment of the RAF, and without
taking into account the various complaints of non-payment, the
Limpopo LPC
concluded that there was a substantial trust deficit of
at least R25 825 699.89. This pointed,
prima
facie
, to
a misappropriation of trust funds.
[13]
As
a result, the Limpopo LPC launched an urgent application for the
suspension of all the directors of the firm. It founded its
jurisdiction in terms of s 43 and s 44(1) of the LPA. Section 44(1)
empowers a high court to adjudicate upon matters concerning
the
conduct of a legal practitioner, a candidate legal practitioner or a
juristic entity.
[4]
Section 43
provides for the LPC to institute urgent legal proceedings in the
high court to suspend a legal practitioner from practice,
if a
disciplinary body is satisfied that the legal practitioner has
misappropriated trust monies.
[5]
[14]
The application was defended. The common
thread running through the defences of the third to eighth
respondents was that their shareholding,
if any, was minor, and as
individuals they had nothing to do with the firm’s finances.
This aspect, they alleged, was entirely
within the knowledge and
control of the second respondent. They were not provided with
financial statements, were not consulted
in respect of major
decisions and did not receive any distributions of profit. The
respondents were aware of the duplicate payment
of R29 million by the
RAF, but either assumed that it had been satisfactorily attended to,
or when they did not receive a proper
explanation, resigned from the
firm.
[15]
The third and fifth respondents stated that
during the course of 2014, and without their knowledge, the second
respondent unilaterally
decided to incorporate the existing
partnership into a company. No shareholder agreement was entered
into, and they were merely
issued with shareholders’
certificates. In effect, they were nothing more than ‘salaried
employees’ and were
treated as such. When they did not receive
a satisfactory explanation from the second respondent, the third and
fifth respondents
resigned from the firm on 1 February 2021 and
immediately founded a new firm, the ninth respondent, which took over
all the active
files, amounting to 500, which they had been handling
for the firm. They assert that they were intentionally kept in the
dark about
the affairs of the firm and themselves lodged a complaint
against the second respondent on 21 May 2021.
[16]
The sixth respondent stated that he was
appointed as a director on 30 April 2011, with a 4 percent
shareholding. He resigned
on 1 February 2021 to form his own firm. He
was a ‘director and employee’ and was responsible only
for litigation.
[17]
The seventh respondent stated that she
joined the firm on 21 August 2017 as a ‘salaried director’
with the title Director:
Core Business. Her role was to ensure that
the litigation strategy of the firm was aligned; to manage the
performance of the attorneys;
and to ensure synergy between the
support staff and the professional staff. She remained a director of
the firm.
[18]
The fourth respondent and eighth respondent
claim that they were not directors. In the same breath, they describe
themselves as
‘salaried directors’, taking up those
positions in May 2015 and October 2016 respectively. They state that
they were
not practising for their own account and were not allowed
to receive trust monies from the public.
[19]
The respondents did not deal with the
merits of the application, although some raised points of a technical
nature. It was argued
that the requirements of an interim interdict
had not been met and that the chairperson of the Limpopo LPC had no
authority to
launch the proceedings.
[20]
This
last point
in
limine
was upheld by the high court, which found that the resolution to
launch the proceedings was fatally defective, in that it was signed
only by the chairperson of the Limpopo LPC. It held that the issue
was not whether the chairperson had the necessary authority
to act,
but whether the institution of proceedings was authorised by the
Council. The high court found that the Limpopo LPC had
failed to
produce any evidence that the other members of the Council had
authorised the institution of proceedings, in that no
attendance
register was attached, nor were confirmatory affidavits filed. In
concluding that there was no authorisation, the high
court placed
reliance on Corbett J’s judgment in
Griffiths
& Inglis (Pty) Ltd v Southern Cape Blasters (Pty) Ltd
.
[6]
[21]
Since
then, the issue of authority has been dealt with in a number of
decisions of this Court.
[7]
The position is now established that the manner to challenge the
authority of a litigant is to utilise rule 7(1) of the Uniform
Rules
of Court.
[8]
The original understanding of rule 7(1) was that it only applied to
the mandate provided to attorneys.
[9]
However, this Court in
Unlawful
Occupiers, School Site v City of Johannesburg
[10]
(
Unlawful
Occupiers
)
,
citing
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
[11]
and
Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd
,
[12]
held
that the remedy for a respondent who wishes to challenge the
authority of a person allegedly acting on behalf of the purported
applicant is provided for in rule 7(1).
[13]
[22]
In
Unlawful
Occupiers
,
the founding affidavit of the deponent was confined to stating that
he was ‘. . . duly authorised by delegated power to bring
this
application . . .’. This purported authorisation was challenged
by the respondent. In reply, the deponent produced a
resolution of
the municipal council, in consultation with the director for legal
services, authorising him to launch the proceedings.
This Court found
that there was rarely any motivation for deliberately launching an
unauthorised application. In any event, once
a resolution, or other
document proving authority, had been produced that is where the
challenge ends.
[23]
Although the high court upheld the point
in
limine
, it went on to deal with the
merits of the matter on the basis that the interests of justice
dictated that the matter be finalised.
Nonetheless, its finding on
the question of authority cannot be allowed to stand. It is at odds
with the principle set out in
Unlawful
Occupiers
.
[24]
Regarding the merits, the high court
proceeded to set out the three stage inquiry for determining whether
a person was ‘fit
and proper’. The first leg is to
establish whether, on the facts, the offending conduct has been
proven on a balance of probabilities;
the second is whether the
person is a fit and proper person, taking into account the
misconduct; and the final leg is whether the
person should be
suspended from the roll or struck from the roll. The high court found
that every complaint related to the second
respondent and no
complaint was brought directly against the other respondents, whose
suspension was sought ‘merely’
because they were
directors of the firm at some point. On this basis, the high court
found that the threshold for the first factual
leg of the inquiry had
not been met and thus it was unnecessary to inquire further.
[25]
The high court found further that all the
allegations related to the second respondent and the ‘extremely
general allegations’
of the Limpopo LPC did not refer to the
other respondents at all. It held that because the suspension of the
third to eighth respondents
was sought merely because they were
directors at one stage of the firm’s existence, the Limpopo LPC
had failed to pass the
first factual leg of the inquiry. It was
therefore unnecessary to enquire whether they were fit and proper to
practise, taking
into account their conduct, and, if not, whether
they should be suspended from practice.
[26]
Every
director has a fiduciary duty towards the company of which it is a
director. To plead ignorance of financial matters, when
faced with
allegations of misappropriation, does not absolve a director.
[14]
It has been emphasised over the years that legal practitioners cannot
escape liability by contending that they had no responsibility
for
the keeping of the books of account or the control and administration
of the trust account.
[15]
As
this Court stated in
Hepple
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
,
[16]
for an attorney to explain trust deficits on the grounds that he or
she had no involvement in the financial affairs of the firm
‘is
no defence at all’.
[27]
Abdication
of responsibilities does not absolve legal practitioners of their
duties. As far back as
Incorporated
Law Society, Transvaal v K and Others
,
[17]
the
court cautioned attorneys who attempted to excuse their conduct on
the basis that they were responsible for other work in the
firm, and
did not concern themselves with the books of account. In that matter,
as here, a particular individual in the firm was
tasked with handling
the books of account. The court stated:
‘
Every
attorney must realise that it is a fundamental duty on his part,
breach of which may easily lead to his being removed from
the roll,
to ensure that the books of the firm are properly kept, that there
are sufficient funds at all times to meet the trust
account claims,
and that when he makes the declaration required for fidelity fund
purposes there is no doubt that that declaration
is truly and
honestly made.’
[18]
[28]
In addition, the respondents were
constrained to concede that the concept of ‘a salaried
director’ is not one found
in the
Companies Act
of
2008 or the LPA. Once a legal practitioner is appointed as a
director, whatever the factual terms of the arrangement may be,
they
bear full responsibility for the finances of the firm.
[29]
At this stage, the inquiry is not whether the legal
practitioner is ‘fit and proper’. This is the inquiry to
be undertaken
when final relief is sought. If it is found that the
legal practitioner is not fit and proper, the court then has a
discretion
on what sanction to impose. All that is necessary at this
stage is that sufficient facts have been shown to justify an interim
suspension.
[30]
The
requirements for an interim interdict are well known and do not bear
repetition.
[19]
On the facts
of this case, there can be no doubt that the offending conduct in
respect of the financial affairs of the firm has
been established. On
their own version, the third to eighth respondents, by playing no
role whatsoever in respect of the accounting
and financial affairs of
the firm, were in dereliction of their duties as directors. All that
is required from the Limpopo LPC
is to show a
prima facie
right, even if open to some doubt. Here, it could be argued that the
Limpopo LPC established a clear right because there was no
refutation
of the firm’s misdeeds, only a denial of responsibility for
those misdeeds, which, in respect of directors, is
no defence at all.
The balance of convenience favours the regulatory body, which has no
alternative means of performing its oversight
functions.
[31]
The
parties proceeded on the premise that the interim order was
appealable. In the exercise of its discretion, an appeal court is
not
bound by the conclusions of the high court in the granting of interim
interdicts and may depart from the high court’s
order on any
grounds that it feels are necessary.
[20]
This is self-evidently a matter which requires the intervention of
this Court. Such applications are brought by the regulatory
body for
the protection of the general public against malfeasance of legal
practitioners. In many respects, the orders granted
are final in
effect. The dismissal of the application in respect of the third to
eighth respondents prevented the Limpopo LPC from
playing its
oversight role over legal practitioners.
[32]
Interim applications for the suspension of
a legal practitioner pending an investigation are generally
undesirable if the suspension
sought is for a lengthy period. Such
applications should be launched only where there is no other means of
safeguarding the public
from the alleged malfeasance of a legal
practitioner. An interim order for suspension has a very grave impact
on the professional
life of a legal practitioner, who would
nonetheless be severely prejudiced if exonerated at the end of an
investigation by the
LPC.
[33]
The Limpopo LPC seeks an order for a period
of suspension of 18 months pending an investigation into the
affairs of the third
to ninth respondents. The order granted against
the second respondent on 25 October 2021, by agreement, was for a
period of 12
months. This was almost twenty one months ago. The
Limpopo LPC has had ample opportunity in the intervening period to
conduct its
investigations into the finances of the firm and those of
the second respondent who, it is common cause, controlled the
finances
of the firm. The order granted against the second respondent
gave the Limpopo LPC far reaching powers to take control of the trust
account of the firm and all the accounting records of the second
respondent. This means that the investigative work by the LPC
must be
largely completed. All that remains is for the LPC to take over and
investigate those files which were taken by the respective
directors
when they left the firm. Six months ought to be more than adequate
for this purpose. As far as the ninth respondent is
concerned, it is
common cause that the active files of the third and fifth respondents
were transferred to it upon incorporation.
To that extent an order
should also be granted against the ninth respondent. The Limpopo LPC
should proceed with final relief against
the respondents, if
indicated, at the earliest opportunity.
[34]
What remains is the issue of costs. When
the Limpopo LPC applied to the high court for leave to appeal the
judgment, its application
was dismissed with costs on the attorney
and client scale. This, said the high court, was because the Limpopo
LPC ‘used a
personal and emotional attack in its notice of
application for leave to appeal against the respondents and the
court’.
[35]
This comment was presumably a reference to
paragraphs 2.1 and 3.2 of the Limpopo LPC’s notice of appeal,
in which the third
to eighth respondents were referred to as
‘thug-like Practitioners, who continue to engage in Subterfuge,
whilst obfuscating
and detracting everyone’s attention from the
fact that they have grossly brought the profession into disrepute
through their
unlawful thieving conduct’.
[36]
The notice of appeal went on:
‘
3.2.
The Learned Judge should have also recognised the fact that in spite
of all the obfuscating resorted
to by the Third to the Eighth
Respondents, no amount of obfuscating and resorting to subterfuge,
could undo the fact that these
Respondents had indeed violated the
Legal Position, and all such subterfuge and obfuscation, were
indicative of the fact that these
practitioners were so lacking in
insight regarding their duty to the public that they could not, and
should not have been allowed
to continue to practice law, since to
allow them to do so as the Learned Judge has done, constitutes a
gross dereliction of duty,
which no other reasonable Court will allow
to stand.’
Such language ill befits
the watchdog of the legal profession and has no place in a notice of
appeal.
[37]
It is also necessary to mention the manner
in which the record in this matter was prepared. This, too, has a
bearing on the costs
of the appeal. All that was required for the
adjudication of the appeal was the notice of motion and founding
affidavit, the answering
affidavits of the respondents, the replying
affidavits and the judgment of the high court on the merits and on
the leave to appeal.
These documents amount to 386 pages (to which a
few annexures referred to in the heads of argument should be added).
Instead, the
Court was saddled with a record of 1427 pages put
together in an entirely haphazard fashion with the notice of motion
commencing
on page 470.
[38]
The
LPC is the regulator of the profession. Of all litigants, one would
have expected assiduous compliance with the rules of this
Court by
the Limpopo LPC. Rule 8(7) of the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) Rules
directs litigants to prepare a core bundle consisting
of the material
documents in a case, preferably in a chronological sequence. In terms
of SCA rule 8(9), whenever a decision of
an appeal is likely to hinge
exclusively on a portion of the record, the appellant is obliged to
request the respondents consent
to omit the unnecessary parts of the
record. This was not done. The Court may make a special costs order
if no request was made
or if either of the parties acted
unreasonably.
[21]
For this
reason, I am of the view that the Limpopo LPC should not be entitled
to the costs of the appeal.
[39]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with no order as to
costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside
and replaced with the following:
‘
1
The third to eighth respondents are suspended from practicing as
attorneys for a period of
six months pending the finalisation of
investigations into their conduct as directors of the first
respondent, failing which the
suspension will lapse.
2
The third to eighth respondents are ordered to hand over and deliver
their certificates
of enrolment as legal practitioners to the
Registrar of the Limpopo Division of the High Court, Polokwane within
7 days from date
of this order.
3
In the event of the third to eighth respondents failing to comply
with the terms of
the order granted in paragraph 2 above, within 7
days from date of this order, the Sheriff of the district in which
the third to
eighth respondents’ certificates of enrolment are
found, is authorised and directed to take possession of the said
certificates
and to hand them to the applicant.
4
The Director of the Limpopo Provincial Council of the applicant,
Khomotso Matsaung,
or any person nominated by her, and/or the
Director of the Gauteng Provincial Council of the South African Legal
Practice Council,
Johan van Staden, or any person nominated by him,
is appointed
curator bonis
to administer and control the trust
accounts of the third to eighth respondents, including accounts
relating to insolvent and deceased
estates and any deceased estate
and any estate under curatorship connected with the respondents’
practices as legal practitioners,
including the separate banking
accounts opened and kept by the third to ninth respondents at any
bank in the Republic of South
Africa in terms of
section 86(1)
and
(2) of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
, in which monies from such
trust banking accounts have been invested by virtue of the provisions
of the said subsections, or in
which monies in any manner have been
deposited or credited (the said accounts being hereafter referred to
as “the trust accounts”),
with the following powers and
duties:
4.1
immediately to take possession of the third to eighth respondents’
accounting records, records,
files and, subject to the approval of
the Board of Control of the Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund, to
sign all forms and generally
operate the trust accounts, but only to
such extent and for such purpose as may be necessary to bring to
completion current transactions
in which the third to eighth
respondents were acting at the date of this order.
4.2
subject to the approval and control of the Board of Control of the
Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund
and where monies had been paid
incorrectly and unlawfully from the undermentioned trust accounts, to
recover and receive and, if
necessary in the interests of persons
having lawful claims upon the trust account(s) and/or against the
third to ninth respondents
in respect of monies held, received and/or
invested by the respondents in terms of
section 86(1)
and (2) and/or
section 86(3)
and/or
section 86(4)
of the Legal Practice Act 28 of
2014 (hereinafter referred to as “trust monies”), to take
any legal proceedings which
may be necessary for the recovery of
money which may be due to such persons in respect of incomplete
transactions, if any, in which
the third to eighth respondents were
and may still have been concerned and to receive such monies and to
pay the same to the credit
of the trust account(s);
4.3
to ascertain from the third to eighth respondents’ accounting
records the names of all persons
on whose account the third to eighth
respondents appear to hold or to have received trust monies from
(hereinafter referred to
as “trust creditors”) and to
call upon the third to eighth respondents to furnish them, within 30
(thirty) days of
the date of service of this order or such further
period as they may agree to in writing, with the names, addresses and
amounts
due to all trust creditors;
4.4
to call upon such trust creditors to furnish such proof, information
and/or affidavits as they may require,
to enable them, acting in
consultation with, and subject to the requirements of, the Board of
Control of the Legal Practitioners
Fidelity Fund, to determine
whether any such trust creditor has a claim in respect of monies in
the trust account(s) of the respondents
and, if so, the amount of
such claim;
4.5
to admit or reject, in whole or in part, subject to the approval of
the Board of Control of the Legal
Practitioners Fidelity Fund, the
claims of any such trust creditor or creditors, without prejudice to
such trust creditor’s
or creditors’ right of access to
the civil courts;
4.6
having determined the amounts which she considers are lawfully due to
trust creditors, to pay such claims
in full, but subject always to
the approval of the Board of Control of the Legal Practitioners
Fidelity Fund;
4.7
in the event of there being any surplus in the trust account(s) of
the third to eighth respondents after
payment of the admitted claims
of all trust creditors in full, to utilise such surplus to settle or
reduce (as the case may
be), firstly, any claim of the Legal
Practitioners Fidelity Fund in terms of
section 86(5)
of the
Legal
Practice Act 28 of 2014
in respect of any interest therein referred
to and, secondly, without prejudice to the rights of the creditors of
the respondents,
the costs, fees and expenses referred to in
paragraph 10 hereunder, or such portion thereof as has not already
been separately
paid by the third to eighth respondents to the
applicant, and, if there is any balance left over after payment in
full of such
claims, costs, fees and expenses, to pay such balance,
subject to the approval of the Board of Control of the Legal
Practitioners
Fidelity Fund, to the third to eighth respondents, if
they are solvent, or, if the third to eighth respondents are
insolvent, to
the trustee(s) of the third to eighth respondents’
insolvent estates;
4.8
in the event of there being insufficient trust monies in the trust
banking account(s) of the third to
eighth respondents, in accordance
with the available documentation and information, to pay in full the
claims of trust creditors
who have lodged claims for repayment and
whose claims have been approved, to distribute the credit balance(s)
which may be available
in the trust banking account(s) amongst the
trust creditors, alternatively to pay the balance to the Legal
Practitioners Fidelity
Fund;
4.9
subject to the approval of the chairman of the Board of Control of
the Legal Practitioners Fidelity
Fund, to appoint nominees or
representatives and/or consult with and/or engage the services of
legal practitioners, counsel, accountants
and/or any other persons,
where considered necessary, to assist them in carrying out their
duties as curators; and
4.10 to
render from time to time, as curators, returns to the Board of
Control of the Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund
showing how the
trust account(s) of the third to eighth respondents has/have been
dealt with until such time as the Board of Control
of the Legal
Practitioners Fidelity Fund notifies them that they may regard their
duties as curators terminated.
5
That the third to eighth respondents immediately deliver their
accounting records, records,
files and documents containing
particulars and information relating to:
5.1
any monies received, held or paid by the third to eighth respondents
for or on account of any person
while practicing as an attorney;
5.2
any monies invested by the third to eighth respondents in terms of
section 86(3)
and/or
section 86(4)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of
2014
;
5.3
any interest on monies so invested which was paid over or credited to
the third to eighth respondents;
5.4
any estate of a deceased person or an insolvent estate or an estate
under curatorship administered by
the third to eighth respondents,
whether as executor or trustee or curator or on behalf of the
executor, trustee or curator;
5.5
any insolvent estate administered by the third to eighth respondents
as trustee or on behalf of the
trustee in terms of the
Insolvency Act
24 of 1936
;
5.6
any trust administered by the third to eighth respondents as trustee
or on behalf of the trustee in
terms of the Trust Property Control
Act 57 of 1988;
5.7
any company liquidated in terms of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 read
together with the provisions of
the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
,
administered by the third to eighth respondents by or on behalf of
the liquidator;
5.8
any close corporation liquidated in terms of the
Close Corporations
Act 69 of 1984
, administered by the third to eighth respondents as or
on behalf of the liquidator; and
5.9
the third to eighth respondents’ practices as legal
practitioners of the Limpopo Division of the
High Court, Polokwane,
to the curators so appointed, provided that, as far as such
accounting records, records, files and documents
are concerned, the
third to eighth respondents shall be entitled to have reasonable
access to such records, but always subject
to the supervision of such
curator or their nominee.
6
Should the third to eighth respondents fail to comply with the
provisions of the preceding
paragraphs of this order on service
thereof upon them or after a return by the person entrusted with the
service thereof that he
or she has been unable to effect service
thereof on the third to eighth respondents (as the case may be), the
Sheriff for the district
in which such accounting records, records,
files and documents are, be empowered and directed to search for and
to take possession
thereof, wherever they may be, and to deliver them
to such curator.
7
That the curator shall be entitled to:
7.1
hand over to the persons entitled thereto all such records, files and
documents provided that a satisfactory
written undertaking had been
received from such persons to pay any amount, either determined on
taxation or by agreement, in respect
of fees and disbursements due to
the firm;
7.2
require from the persons referred to in paragraph 7.1 to provide any
such documentation or information
which they may consider relevant in
respect of a claim or possible or anticipated claim, against them
and/or the third to eighth
respondents and/or the third to eighth
respondents’ clients and/or the Legal Practitioners Fidelity
Fund in respect of money
and/or other property entrusted to the third
to eighth respondents. Provided that any person entitled thereto
shall be granted
reasonable access thereto and shall be permitted to
make copies thereof;
7.3
publish this order or an abridged version thereof in any newspaper
they consider appropriate; and
7.4
wind-up the third to eighth respondents’ practices in the event
that they consider it appropriate.
8
The third to eighth respondents are hereby removed from office as:
8.1
executor of any estate of which the third to eighth respondents have
been appointed in terms of
section 54(1)
(a)
(v) of the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
or the estate of any other
person referred to in
section 72(1)
;
8.2
curators or guardians of any minor or other person’s property
in terms of
section 72(1)
read with
section 54(1)
(a)
(v) and
section 85
of the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
;
8.3
trustees of any insolvent estate in terms of
section 59
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
;
8.4
liquidators of any company in terms of
section 379(2)
read with
section 379
(e)
of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 read together
with the provisions of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
;
8.5
trustees of any trust in terms of section 20(1) of the Trust Property
Control Act 57 of 1988;
8.6
liquidators of any close corporation appointed in terms of
section 74
of the
Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984
; and
8.7
administrators appointed in terms of section 74 of the Magistrates’
Court Act 32 of 1944.
9
The third to eighth respondents are hereby ordered and directed,
jointly and severally,
to:
9.1
pay in terms of
section 87(2)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
,
the reasonable costs of the inspection of the accounting records of
the respondents;
9.2
pay the reasonable fees of the auditor engaged by the applicant;
9.3
pay the reasonable fees and expenses of the curator, including
travelling time;
9.4
pay the reasonable fees and expenses of any person(s) consulted
and/or engaged by the curator as aforesaid;
and
9.5
pay the expenses relating to the publication of this order or an
abbreviated version thereof.
10
If there are any trust funds available, the third to eighth
respondents shall within 6 (six) months
after having been requested
to do so by the curators, or within such longer period as the
curators may agree to in writing, satisfy
the curators, by means of
the submission of taxed bills of costs or otherwise, of the amount of
the fees and disbursements due
to them (third to eighth respondents)
in respect of their (former) legal practices, and should they fail to
do so, they shall not
be entitled to recover such fees and
disbursements from the curators without prejudice, however, to such
rights (if any) as
they may have against the trust creditor(s)
concerned for payment or recovery thereof.
11
A certificate issued by a Director of the Legal Practitioners
Fidelity Fund shall constitute
prima facie
proof of the
curators’ costs and that the Registrar be authorised to issue a
writ of execution on the strength of such certificate
in order to
collect the curators’ costs.
12
The third to eighth respondents shall during the period of suspension
comply with the provisions
of
sections 84(1)
and
85
of the
Legal
Practice Act 28 of
2014.
13
The third to eighth respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this
application, jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be
absolved.’
________________________
C HEATON NICHOLLS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
C
Georgiades SC (with P W Makhambeni)
Instructed
by:
AM
Vilakazi Tau Incorporated Attorneys, Polokwane
Lovius
Block Incorporated, Bloemfontein
For
the third, fifth and
ninth
respondents:
G
N Naudé SC (with G T Kyriazis)
Instructed
by:
Hansen
Incorporated Attorneys, Pretoria
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the fourth, sixth and
eight
respondents:
M
R Maphutha (with A Seshoka)
Instructed
by:
Matotola
Tseleng Attorneys, Polokwane
Tsetsewa
Incorporated Attorneys, Polokwane
Duba
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the seventh respondent:
C
T Malatji
Instructed
by:
Zikalala
Attorneys, Polokwane
Mphahlehle
& Makhumbila Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Section 3
of the
Legal Practice Act.
[2]
Hepple
and Others v Law Society of The Northern Provinces
[2014] ZASCA 75
;
[2014] 3 All SA 408
(SCA) para 9.
[3]
26(4)
Lawsa
3 ed
para 77. See also
General
Council of the Bar of South Africa v Matthys
2002 (5) SA 1
(E) para 4(1).
[4]
Section
44(1)
provides that ‘[t]he provisions of this Act do not
derogate in any way from the power of the High Court to adjudicate
upon
and make orders in respect of matters concerning the conduct of
a legal practitioner, candidate legal practitioner or a juristic
entity’.
[5]
Section
43 provides that ‘[d]espite the provisions of this Chapter, if
upon considering a complaint, a disciplinary body
is satisfied that
a legal practitioner has misappropriated trust monies or is guilty
of other serious misconduct, it must inform
the Council thereof with
the view to the Council instituting urgent legal proceedings in the
High Court to suspend the legal
practitioner from practice and to
obtain alternative interim relief’.
[6]
Griffiths
& Inglis (Pty) Ltd v Southern Cape Blasters (Pty) Ltd
[1972] 4 All SA 269
(C);
1972 (4) SA 249
(C) at 252, where it was
stated that in the paragraph dealing with a letter, drafted by the
managing director and terminating
the contract that gave rise to the
dispute before the court, no mention was made that the contents of
the said letter had been
discussed with and approved by the board of
directors.
[7]
Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd
[2004]
2 All SA 609
(SCA);
2004
(3) SA 615
(SCA);
Unlawful
Occupiers, School Site v City of Johannesburg
2005 (4) SA 199 (SCA); [2005] 2 All SA 108 (SCA).
[8]
Rule
7(1) provides that ‘. . . the authority of anyone acting on
behalf of a party may, within 10 days after it has come
to the
notice of a party that such person is so acting, or with the leave
of the court on good cause shown at any time before
judgment, be
disputed, whereafter such person may no longer act unless he
satisfies the court that he is authorised so to act,
and to enable
him to do so the court may postpone the hearing of the action or
application’.
[9]
A
C Cilliers, C Loots and H C Nel
The
Civil Practice of the High Court and Supreme Court in South Africa
Vol
1 at 268.
[10]
Unlawful
Occupiers, School Site v City of Johannesburg
2005 (4) SA 199 (SCA); [2005] 2 All SA 108 (SCA).
[11]
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
1992
(2) SA 703 (W).
[12]
Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd
[2004]
2 All SA 609 (SCA).
[13]
Unlawful
Occupiers, School Site
para
14.
[14]
Hepple
and
Others v Law Society of The Northern Provinces
[2014] ZASCA 75
;
[2014] 3 All SA 408
(SCA) para 21.
[15]
Hewetson
v Law Society of the Free State
[2020]
ZASCA 49
;
[2020] 3 All SA 15
(SCA);
2020 (5) SA 86
(SCA) para 56;
Hepple
v and Others Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2014] ZASCA 75
;
[2014] 3 All SA 408
(SCA) para 14;
Malan
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2008]
ZASCA 90
;
2009 (1) SA 216
(SCA);
[2009] 1 All SA 133
(SCA) paras
27-28.
[16]
Hepple
para
21.
[17]
Incorporated
Law Society, Transvaal v K and Others
[1959] 2 All SA 24
(T);
1959 (2) SA 386
(T) at 391cited with
approval in
Hewetson
para 55.
[18]
Ibid.
[19]
The requirements for the granting of an interim interdict are: (i) a
prima
facie
right, albeit open to some doubt; (ii) irreparable harm if the
interdict were not to be granted; (iii) the balance of convenience
in favour of granting the interdict; and (iv) that the applicant has
no alternative remedy.
[20]
Hix
Networking Technologies CC v System Publishers
(Pty)
Ltd and Another
[1996] ZASCA 107
;
[1996]
4 All SA 675
(A);
1997 (1) SA 391
(A) at 402B-C.
[21]
See
for example
Siyangena
Technologies (Pty) Ltd v PRASA and Others
[2022] ZASCA 149
;
[2023] 1 All SA 74
(SCA);
2023 (2) SA 51
(SCA)
paras 48-51.
sino noindex
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