Case Law[2023] ZASCA 167South Africa
Legal Practice Council v Rubushe (1004/2022) [2023] ZASCA 167 (1 December 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
1 December 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Legal Practitioner – misconduct involving dishonesty – striking from the roll appropriate remedy – court a quo making material misdirection in suspending the respondent from practising for two years – suspension order set aside on appeal and replaced with striking order.
Judgment
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## Legal Practice Council v Rubushe (1004/2022) [2023] ZASCA 167 (1 December 2023)
Legal Practice Council v Rubushe (1004/2022) [2023] ZASCA 167 (1 December 2023)
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sino date 1 December 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no. 1004/2022
In the matter between:
LEGAL
PRACTICE COUNCIL
Appellant
and
BULELANI
RUBUSHE
Respondent
Neutral
Citation:
Legal Practice Council v
Bulelani Rubushe
(Case no 1004/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 167
(1 December 2023)
Coram:
PETSE DP and MBATHA JA and MUSI,
BINNS-WARD and KATHREE-SETILOANE AJJA
Heard:
22 November 2023
Delivered:
1 December 2023
Summary:
Legal Practitioner – misconduct
involving dishonesty – striking from the roll appropriate
remedy –
court
a quo making material misdirection in suspending the respondent from
practising for two years –
suspension order set aside on appeal
and replaced with striking order.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern Cape Division of
the High Court of South Africa, Makhanda (Jolwana J, Govindjee J
concurring) sitting as a court of first
instance:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs on the
scale as between attorney and client.
2.
Paragraphs 1 and 11 of the revised order of
the High Court issued on 4 August 2022 are set aside.
3.
Paragraph 1 of the said order is
substituted with an order directing that the respondent’s name
be struck off the roll of
legal practitioners kept by the applicant
in terms of
s 30(3)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
, and
paragraph 12 of the said order is consequentially renumbered as
paragraph 11.
4.
Save as provided in paragraphs 2 and 3
above, the revised order made by the High Court is otherwise
confirmed.
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD AJA (PETSE
DP and MBATHA JA and MUSI and KATHREE-SETILOANE AJJA concurring):
[1]
The
respondent, Mr Bulelani Rubushe, was an attorney practising for his
own account under the name and style B.R. Rubushe Attorneys
at
Vincent, East London. Consequent upon proceedings instituted by
the Legal Practice Council (the appellant) arising from
the
respondent’s dishonest misconduct, the Eastern Cape Division of
the High Court (Jolwana J, Govindjee J concurring) made
an order that
provided, in paragraph 1 thereof, that the respondent be suspended
from practising as an attorney for a period of
two years, and, in
paragraph 11, that ‘[a]fter the expiry of the suspension
period, and in the event that the Respondent
is desirous of
practising as an attorney, he shall make a substantive application to
the High Court having jurisdiction to be permitted
to practise as an
attorney and shall serve such application upon the Legal Practice
Council’.
[1]
This
appeal, which is brought with leave granted by the High Court,
concerns only those paragraphs of the order.
[2]
Mr
Rubushe’s misconduct was uncovered when a settlement agreement
in a motor vehicle accident claim, in which he represented
a certain
Mr Zama Mfengwana, was put before Plasket J in the High
Court to be made an order of court. The learned
judge’s
misgivings, and the outcome of the enquiry he made arising from them,
are related in detail in the judgment he handed
down on 15 December
2016. The judgment has been reported sub nom
Mfengwana
v Road Accident Fund
.
[2]
A brief summary of the pertinent facts will therefore suffice
for present purposes.
[3]
The
judge was informed that the matter was the subject of a contingency
fee agreement. The affidavits required by
s 4(1)
and s 4(2) of
the Contingency Fees Act
[3]
were
not in the court file put before him, and he therefore directed that
they be produced before he could make the requested order.
Only
an affidavit by Mr Rubushe was forthcoming. There was no
affidavit from the client.
[4]
The judge found Mr Rubushe’s
affidavit to be ‘wholly inadequate’. There was no
response by the respondent
to the judge’s directions for the
shortcomings to be rectified.
[5]
Plasket
J summarised the pertinent provisions of the Act in his judgment.
It permits legal practitioners to conclude contingency
fee agreements
with their clients on a no-win no-fee basis. Practitioners are
entitled to stipulate for a success fee in
such agreements. The
statute limits the extent of any success fee so stipulated to a
maximum of double the normal fee that
the practitioner would charge
for the work concerned, provided that ‘in the case of claims
sounding in money, the total of
any such success fee payable by the
client to the legal practitioner, shall not exceed 25 per cent of the
total amount awarded
or any amount obtained by the client in
consequence of the proceedings concerned, which amount shall not, for
purposes of calculating
such excess, include any costs’.
[4]
[6]
In
the course of his discourse on the import of the Contingency Fees
Act, the learned judge also referred to the judgment of Morrison
AJ
in
Thulo
v Road Accident Fund
,
[5]
which, he said, sets out the position ‘in very clear
terms’.
[6]
The
reason for mentioning the judge’s reference to
Thulo
will become apparent shortly.
[7]
The settlement agreement provided for an
award of damages in favour of Mr Mfengwana in the sum of
R904 889.17. The
contingency fee agreement purported to
allow Mr Rubushe a fee of 25 percent of the settlement amount.
The salient provisions
of the agreement provided as follows (warts
and all):
‘
5.
The Attorneys hereby warrants (sic) that the normal fees on an
attorney and own client basis perform work (sic) in connection with
the aforementioned proceedings are calculated on the following basis:
25% of the total of damages awarded,
(Set
out hourly, daily, and or applicable rates) (sic)
6.
The Parties agrees (sic) that if the Clients is (sic) successful in
the aforementioned
proceedings;
An
amount shall be payable to the Attorney, calculated according to the
following method;
see
paragraph 5
For
purpose of calculating the higher fee, costs are not included,’
[8]
Plasket J found Mr Rubushe’s
subsequent attempt to get around the inconsistency between the
agreement he had made with his
client and the provisions of the Act
to be disingenuous. He said:
‘
[
22]
Mr Rubushe has, in the affidavit he filed on 6 December 2016 (which I
found to be inadequate), attempted to remedy the predicament
he has
found himself in. He stated that he wished to confirm that ‘I
had complied with Contingency Fee Act 66 of 1977 (sic)
in that I will
charge fee of 25% from the client or (double my fees and take
whichever is lesser which would not be more than 25%
agreed fees)’.
In the following paragraph he stated:
“
Any
fees referred to in paragraph 5 of the Contingency fee Agreement
shall be calculated as follows; the client shall owe the Attorneys
fee calculated in terms of Rule 70 of the Rules of the High Court
plus 100% thereof. (hereafter referred to as the success fees)
provided that in the case of claims sending (sic) in money, the total
of any such success awarded, or any amount obtained by client
in
consequence of the proceedings concerned, which amount shall not, for
purposes of calculating fee, include any costs. This was
explained to
client on 26
th
November 2014.”
[23]
26 November 2014 is the date of signature of the contingency fee
agreement. Two problems arise from the passages of the affidavit
that
I have quoted. First, what Mr Rubushe said about his fee and its
computation is contrary to what is contained in the contingency
fee
agreement. He appears to accept that the contingency fee agreement is
contrary to the Act and now seeks to tender to amend
it unilaterally
and retrospectively. That cannot avail him in his attempt to sidestep
the difficulty posed by clauses 5 and 6 of
the contingency fee
agreement. Secondly, he could not have given the information he
claims to have given to Mr M
fengwana when the
contingency fee agreement was signed for the simple reason that it
did not contain that information. The affidavit
is transparently
disingenuous.’
[9]
Plasket J identified that not only did the
agreement not comply with the Contingency Fees Act, it also purported
to permit Mr Rubushe
to claim in fees (excluding disbursements) a sum
that was grossly disproportionate, having regard to the modest amount
of work
involved in attaining the early settlement of the claim and
the demonstrably poor quality of the professional services that he
had rendered.
[10]
The
judge concluded that Mr Rubushe was ‘guilty of an attempt to
grossly overreach his client, of rapacious and unconscionable
conduct’.
[7]
He set the
agreement aside and directed that ‘BR Rubushe Attorneys may
only recover from [Mr Mfengwana] their attorney and
client costs on
the High Court scale, such costs to be taxed by the Taxing Master
prior to the presentation of the bill of costs
to [Mr Mfengwana]’.
Plasket J requested the registrar of the court to forward a copy of
his judgment to the Cape Law
Society (the appellant’s legal
predecessor as the regulatory body for the attorneys’
profession) and ‘to contact
[Mr Mfengwana] and to explain to
him the import of th[e] judgment and the rights that it accord[ed]
him’.
[8]
[11]
In two letters written to the Law Society
in response to Plasket J’s complaint about his conduct, Mr
Rubushe showed that
he refused to accept the court’s analysis
of the Contingency Fees Act and its determination that he had not
complied with
it. He accused the learned judge of having ‘acted
ultra vires in posing (sic) his nose of client contingency (sic),
as
the matter was in Court for settlement to be made. In fact
contract was signed by client’. He proceeded ‘I
am
wondering why the judge close (sic) one eye when he was reading
Thulo
judgment, and I fail to understand why
Thulo
at 451’ (sic). He concluded, ‘I find that this
actions (sic) [ie those of the judge] were malicious, contradictory
and acted (sic) contrary to the Act’. In a further letter
to the Law Society, Mr Rubushe claimed that Mr Mfengwana
had called
him to ask ‘who gave instructions to the Judge to challenge his
agreement’.
[12]
It goes without saying that the grossly
disrespectful and contemptuous tone and content of Mr Rubushe’s
letters to the Law
Society evinced further examples of conduct
unbefitting a member of the legal profession. The High Court
was correctly conscious
of this, and professed to have taken it into
account as an aggravating factor.
[13]
Mr Rubushe informed the Law Society that he
intended to lodge an appeal from the judgment of Plasket J.
Unsurprisingly, he
did not do so.
[14]
Over the course of the following months,
under pressure from the Law Society, Mr Rubushe had four different
and mutually irreconcilable
bills of costs in respect of his
attendances in Mr Mfengwana’s matter drafted for taxation.
The Law Society engaged
a costs consultant to review the bills
prepared by the respondent. The review exposed that Mr Rubushe
had sought to charge
exorbitant amounts for attendances for which he
was not entitled to charge a fee. An example was charging for
drafting the
summons and particulars of claim and then also for
perusing those documents after the summons had been issued.
There were
also a number of charges for work that had not been done,
including consultations, inspections
in
loco
and telephone calls that did not
take place. It hardly needs stating that this afforded yet
further evidence of dishonest
conduct by the respondent. He
blamed others for the problems discovered with his bills of costs.
His explanation did
not bear scrutiny. It is inconceivable that
anyone else would have dreamt up attendances by Mr Rubushe which had
not happened.
The overwhelming probability is that such
attendances were included in the bills at the instance of the
respondent.
[15]
If that were not enough, in defiance of the
judgment of Plasket J delivered four months earlier, Mr Rubushe paid
Mr Mfengwana
only R700 000 of the settlement award that he
received from the Road Accident Fund on his client’s behalf.
The
payment to client was made on 10 March 2017. In the face of
a judgment holding that he was not entitled to do so, Mr Rubushe
sought to withhold from his client an amount approximating 25 percent
of the award. He was seeking thereby to implement a
contract
that the court had found to be unlawful and overreaching. His
conduct in this regard, if not downright dishonest,
was outrageously
dishonourable for an officer of the court.
[16]
The position was aggravated by the fact
that Mr Rubushe exacted the payment of the settlement award to his
offices at a time after
he had given notice of his withdrawal as Mr
Mfengwana’s attorney. He therefore had no authority to
receive payment
of the award on Mr Mfengwana’s behalf. It
is obvious that he did so only so as to facilitate his ability to
withhold
from his erstwhile client a substantial portion of the award
payment.
[17]
In July 2017, Mr Mfengwana instituted
proceedings against Mr Rubushe for payment of the monies that had
been withheld. He
did not oppose the claim, and judgment was
granted in favour of Mr Mfengwana on 5 September 2017 by
Robeson J.
He was ordered to pay the costs of those
proceedings on a punitive scale. Mr Rubushe made payment of the
part of the settlement
award that he had wrongfully withheld only
after he was ordered to do so.
[18]
The appellant thereafter resolved to bring
proceedings to have the respondent’s name struck from the roll
of attorneys.
In its judgment in those proceedings, the court a
quo reviewed the evidence against Mr Rubushe that I have summarised
in this judgment
and rejected his attempts at answering it. It
aptly described his answering affidavit as an ‘attempt at
explaining
the inexplicable’. It rightly pointed out that
he failed to ‘take responsibility for what he did’ and
attempted
‘to blame everything on something else or someone
else other than himself instead of taking responsibility for his
actions’.
[19]
After
referring to the three-stage analysis described in
Jasat
v Natal Law Society
[9]
that is applied in applications for the striking of a legal
practitioner from the roll and the elaboration thereon in
Malan
and Another v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
,
[10]
the High Court determined
that it would be inappropriate to strike Mr Rubushe’s name from
the roll. It reasoned its
conclusion as follows in para 30
of the judgment:
‘
The
facts of this matter make it clear that the respondent is not a fit
and proper person to continue to practice (sic). While the
conduct of
the respondent is indisputably of a seriously egregious nature it is
somehow ameliorated by the fact that when all is
said and done the
respondent did not succeed in overreaching his client, Mr Mfengwana.
I must, however, point out that his lack
of success cannot be
accounted for by his lack of trying. It was foiled by Mr Mfengwana
and his new attorneys who acted swiftly
in recovering the amount of
R204 889.17 before it was decimated which would most likely have
happened had they tarried in
moving the application under case no.
3469/2017. There must be a clear distinction between an attempt to
commit an offence and
actually committing the offending conduct. That
distinction leads me to the conclusion that, while he is clearly not
a fit and
proper person to continue to practice, imposing what is
essentially the most extreme punishment a court can give to a legal
practitioner
would not be appropriate.’
[20]
For the reasons that follow, the High
Court’s reasoning was materially misdirected, and this Court is
consequently entitled
to interfere with the order that was made,
notwithstanding its discretionary character. The court was not
at large in the
exercise of its discretion. It was obliged to
exercise it judicially, which included the obligation to have due
regard to
the principles and judicial policies in point identified in
the judgments of this Court.
[21]
The
primary issue to be determined was whether Mr Rubushe was a fit and
proper person to remain on the roll of legal practitioners.
Having correctly found that, by reason of his dishonesty, he was not,
there would have to be exceptional circumstances before a
court will
order a suspension instead of a removal. That much was
stated in the clearest of terms in
Malan
,
[11]
where Harms ADP, writing for a unanimous court, said ‘Obviously,
if a court finds dishonesty, the circumstances must be exceptional
before a court will order a suspension instead of a removal.
Where dishonesty has
not
been established the position is . . . that a court has to exercise a
discretion within the parameters of the facts of the case
without any
preordained limitations.’ (Emphasis supplied.)
[22]
The
principle was articulated in similar terms by Brand JA in
Summerley
v Law Society, Northern Provinces
:
‘The attorney's profession is an honourable profession, which
demands complete honesty and integrity from its members. In
consequence dishonesty is generally regarded as excluding the lesser
stricture of suspension from practice, … .’
[12]
[23]
This Court, also held in
Malan
that ‘[i]t is seldom, if ever,
that a mere suspension from practice for a given period in itself
will transform a person who
is unfit to practise into one who is fit
to practise. Accordingly, as was noted in
A
v Law Society of the Cape of Good Hope
1989
(1) SA 849
(A) at 852E - G, it is implicit … that any
order of suspension must be conditional upon the cause of unfitness
being
removed. For example, if an attorney is found to be unfit
of continuing to practise because of an inability to keep proper
books, the conditions of suspension must be such as to deal with the
inability. Otherwise the unfit person will return to practice
after
the period of suspension with the same inability or disability.
In other words, the fact that a period of suspension
of, say, five
years would be a sufficient penalty for the misconduct does not mean
that the order of suspension should be five
years. It could be more
to cater for rehabilitation
or, if the
court is not satisfied that the suspension will rehabilitate the
attorney, the court ought to strike him from the roll
.
An attorney, who is the subject of a striking-off application and who
wishes a court to consider this lesser option, ought to
place the
court in the position of formulating appropriate conditions of
suspension.’ (Emphasis supplied.)
[24]
In the current case, the respondent did not
do anything to place the court in the position of formulating
appropriate conditions
of suspension and the order made by the court
did not provide for any such conditions. On the contrary, the
requirement to
which the sanction imposed was made subject, namely an
application by the respondent at the end of the period to be
permitted to
resume practice as an attorney, clearly signals that the
court was not satisfied that Mr Rubushe would be a fit and
proper
person to practise as an attorney at that time. For all
the reasons cited with reference to this Court’s judgment in
Malan
, the
only appropriate order in the circumstances of this case was an order
striking his name from the roll.
[25]
The High Court was clearly misdirected in
failing to adhere to the principles articulated in
Malan
and other judgments of this Court to
the same effect. The fact that the respondent did not succeed
in his dishonest endeavour
to deprive his client of a substantial
amount of his damages award only because of the intervention of a
conscientious judge did
not serve in any measure to mitigate his
dishonesty. The dishonest character of the respondent’s
dishonesty was not
affected by his failure to succeed in his attempt
to recover the extortionate fee for which he had stipulated. It
was the
character of his conduct, not its degree of success, that was
germane to the court’s determination of whether he was a fit
and proper person to remain on the roll of legal practitioners.
[26]
As Nugent JA (Harms ADP concurring)
explained in
Law Society of the Cape of
Good Hope v Peter
:
‘
The
enquiry before a court that is called upon to exercise that power [ie
to strike a practitioner’s name from the roll or
suspend him or
her from practising] is not what constitutes an appropriate
punishment for a past transgression but rather what
is required for
the protection of the public in the future. Some cases will require
nothing less than the removal of the attorney
from the roll
forthwith. In other cases, where a court is satisfied that a period
of suspension will be sufficiently corrective
to avoid a recurrence
of the offensive conduct, an order of suspension might suffice. But
the proper approach in each case is not
to weigh the various factors
for the purpose of finding an appropriate punishment - as a criminal
court would do when sentencing
an offender - but to determine
whether, or if appropriate when, an attorney should be permitted to
continue in practice’.
[13]
It
is evident from the passage in the court a quo’s judgment
quoted above
[14]
that it
adopted the wrong approach in the exercise of its powers.
[27]
It was in any event clear from the evidence
summarised in the High Court’s judgment that the respondent’s
dishonesty
was not confined to attempting to overreach his client.
It also manifested in his further conduct after his initial
misconduct
was exposed. Far from showing any insight into his
wrongdoings, the respondent sought to make little of them, blame
others
for them, and, by his failure to pay Mr Mfengwana the full
amount of his award and reliance on fraudulent bills of costs, he
perpetuated
and exacerbated them. He showed no amenability to
rehabilitation; quite the opposite.
[28]
In the circumstances, the High Court erred
in not taking these considerations properly into account.
Making an order of suspension
was misconceived. It was
predicated on misdirections in fact and principle.
[29]
In the result, an order is made as follows:
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
Paragraphs 1 and 11 of the revised order of
the High Court issued on 4 August 2022 are set aside.
3.
Paragraph 1 of the said order is
substituted with an order directing that the respondent’s name
be struck off the roll of
legal practitioners kept by the applicant
in terms of
s 30(3)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
, and
paragraph 12 of the said order is consequentially renumbered as
paragraph 11.
4.
Save as provided in paragraphs 2 and 3
above, the revised order made by the High Court is otherwise
confirmed.
_________________________
A G BINNS-WARD
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellant: KL Watt
Instructed
by:
Wheeldon Rushmere &
Cole, Makhanda
Symington
De Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the
respondent: No
appearance
[1]
The
order, as originally framed, omitted to make provision for the
detailed directions ordinarily included in such orders concerning
the handing over of the delinquent practitioner’s practice to
the executive officer of the Legal Practice Council for winding
up.
The omission was rectified by way of a revised and amplified order
issued on 4 August 2022. The judgment, incorporating
the
originally made order, is listed on SAFLII sub nom,
Legal
Practice Council v Rubushe
[2022]
ZAECMKHC 37. The orders in issue on appeal were in paragraphs
1 and 4 of the originally made order.
[2]
Mfengwana
v Road Accident Fund
[2016] ZAECGHC 159; 2017 (5) SA 445 (ECG).
[3]
Contingency
Fees Act 66 of 1997
.
[4]
Section
2(2)
of the
Contingency Fees Act.
[5]
Thulo v
Road Accident Fund
2011
(5) SA 446
(GSJ) para 51-52
[6]
Mfengwana
para
20.
[7]
Mfengwana
para
27.
[8]
Ibid
para 32B.
[9]
Jasat
v Natal Law Society
[2000] ZASCA 14
;
2000 (3) SA 44
(SCA);
[2000] 2 All SA 310
(A)
para 10.
[10]
Malan
and Another v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2008] ZASCA 90
;
2009 (1) SA 216
(SCA) ;
[2009] 1 All SA 133
(SCA)
(
Malan
).
[11]
Malan
para
10.
[12]
Summerley
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2006] ZASCA 59
;
2006 (5) SA 613
(SCA) para 21.
[13]
Law
Society of the Cape of Good Hope v Peter
[2006] ZASCA 37
;
2009 (2) SA 18
(SCA) para 28 (referred to
with approval by a unanimous bench in
Law
Society of the Northern Provinces v Sonntag
[2011] ZASCA 204
;
2012 (1) SA 372
(SCA
)
para 16, note 7).
[14]
Para
18.
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