Case Law[2023] ZASCA 179South Africa
Hough and Bremner and Another v Road Accident Fund (1024/2022) [2023] ZASCA 179 (18 December 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
18 December 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure and practice – Contingency Fees Agreement Act 66 of 1997 – high court finding that the fees agreement concluded between the appellants was a contingency fee agreement, and setting it aside – refusing to make the settlement agreement between the second appellant and the Road Accident Fund an order of court and amending its terms without affording the parties a right to address it – whether the high court was empowered to grant orders not sought and against a party not cited in the proceedings.
Judgment
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## Hough and Bremner and Another v Road Accident Fund (1024/2022) [2023] ZASCA 179 (18 December 2023)
Hough and Bremner and Another v Road Accident Fund (1024/2022) [2023] ZASCA 179 (18 December 2023)
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sino date 18 December 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 1024/2022
In
the matter between:
HOUGH
& BREMNER INC
FIRST APPELLANT
ANITA
ERNESTO CHIAU
SECOND APPELLANT
and
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Hough & Bremner
and Another v The Road Accident Fund
(1024/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 179
(18 December 2023)
Coram:
MOCUMIE and WEINER JJA and KOEN, CHETTY
and KEIGHTLEY AJJA
Heard:
Matter disposed of without oral hearing
in terms of
s 19
(a)
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email, published on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and
released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
11h00 on 18 December 2023.
Summary:
Civil procedure and practice – Contingency
Fees Agreement Act 66 of 1997 – high court finding that the
fees agreement
concluded between the appellants was a contingency fee
agreement, and setting it aside – refusing to make the
settlement
agreement between the second appellant and the Road
Accident Fund an order of court and amending its terms without
affording
the parties a right to address it – whether the high
court was empowered to grant orders not sought and against a party
not
cited in the proceedings.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Mpumalanga Division of the
High Court, Mbombela (Legodi JP sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
settlement agreement concluded between the parties on 7 March 2022 is
made an order of court.’
JUDGMENT
Weiner
JA (Mocumie JA, Koen, Keightley and Chetty AJJA concurring)
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment and order of the Mpumalanga
Division of the High Court per Legodi
JP (the high court), concerning
a claim against the Road Accident Fund (RAF).
The
appeal
is
the fourth of the appeals
[1]
that have come before this Court on the same issue (
fee
agreements concluded between attorneys and their clients)
since
2022 to date.
All
the appeals center around whether fee agreements concluded between
attorneys and their clients, which make provision,
inter
alia
,
for fees to be paid at the conclusion of the matter, are Contingency
Fee Agreements (CFA), which can be set aside if they do not
comply
with the
Contingency
Fees Act 66 of 1997 (the Act). This appeal involves a claim against
the RAF, where orders were made by the high court,
inter
alia
,
against the first appellant, Hough & Bremner (H&B) Inc, a
firm of attorneys, and their client, the second appellant, Anita
Ernesto Chiau (Ms Chiau). H&B, which was not a party to the
proceedings, obtained leave from the high court
to
join in the proceedings and it and Ms Chiau applied for leave to
appeal the judgment and order. The high court refused leave
to
appeal. As a result, the appellants petitioned this Court, which
granted leave to appeal to it. The RAF does not oppose the
appeal and
abides the decision of this Court.
[2]
The high court reviewed and set aside a fee
agreement dated 11 September 2015 (the fee agreement) that was
entered into between
H&B and Ms Chiau on the basis that it was a
CFA, which did not comply with the formal requirements of the Act. It
also refused
to make a settlement agreement, concluded between Ms
Chiau and the RAF, an order of court, and made orders which were not
sought
by any of the parties. These included orders against H&B,
which was not a party to the proceedings at that stage.
Background
[3]
To arrive at the conclusion I have reached,
a brief background is necessary. H&B
represented
Ms Chiau in a delictual claim instituted against the RAF in the high
court for damages suffered as a result of injuries
sustained in a
motor vehicle collision that occurred on 20 July 2015 in Mpumalanga.
The fee agreement was entered into on 11 September
2015, prior to the
institution of the action.
[4]
The action was settled between Ms Chiau and
the RAF on 7 March 2022. In terms of the settlement, the RAF accepted
liability to pay
100% of Ms Chiau’s proven or agreed damages
that resulted from the collision and undertook to:
(a)
pay Ms Chiau an amount of R1 034 470.20, in
full and final settlement, in respect of loss of earnings and general
damages suffered
as a result of the collision;
(b)
provide Ms Chiau
with
an undertaking in terms of
s 17(4)
(a)
of
the
Road Accident Fund Act of 1996
to cover her future medical
expenses suffered as a result of the collision;
(c)
pay her taxed costs, incurred in the
action, on the scale as between party and party.
[5]
The trial was set down for hearing in the
high court for 14 March 2022. In view of the settlement, H&B
filed the settlement
agreement, Notice of Acceptance, and affidavits
by both Ms Chiau and H&B confirming that no contingency fee
agreement had been
concluded. Legodi JP, concerned as to whether no
contingency fee agreement was concluded, refused to allocate the
matter to proceed
on 14 March 2022.
[6]
This was followed by a directive from
Legodi JP removing the matter from the roll and requesting certain
information from H&B,
under oath, relating to the funding of the
legal fees in the case. The questions revolved around whether the fee
agreement between
H&B and Ms Chiau constituted a CFA within the
ambit of the Act. The query related to the following:
‘
The
suggestion that no contingency fee agreement has been concluded
pre-supposes that the plaintiff and his or her attorney agreed
on a
specific amount of a fee for the litigation when the instructions
were taken and that the agreed fee
was so
paid by
the plaintiff…’
[7]
In response to the list of questions, Mr
Eastes of H&B, the attorney who acted on behalf of Ms Chiau, on 8
March 2022, filed
an affidavit in which he set out in detail the
background to his firm and Ms Chiau entering into the fee agreement,
which he attached
to the affidavit. The fee agreement contained,
inter alia, the following provisions;
‘…
3.4.3 that the fee
agreement is not a contingency fee agreement as defined in the
Contingency Fee Act, Act 66 of 1997;
3.4.4 plaintiff shall at
all times be liable for payment of the attorney’s fees and
disbursements, including VAT, unless otherwise
agreed in writing and
signed by plaintiff;
3.4.5 that the accounts
shall be delivered to plaintiff in respect of disbursements as soon
as they are incurred, and interim accounts
in respect of attorney’s
fees from time to time as well as comprehensive accounts at the
conclusion of the matter, unless
otherwise agreed in writing and
signed by plaintiff;
3.4.6 plaintiff shall be
liable upon demand by me to pay a deposit in respect of attorney’s
fees and/ or disbursements…’
Mr Eastes went on to
state:
‘
3.11
On 15 February 2022, I consulted with the plaintiff and the plaintiff
confirmed under oath that she did not enter into a contingency
fee
agreement as defined in the Contingency Fee Act, 1996 with myself and
I append hereto a copy of the plaintiff’s affidavit,
dated 15
February 2022 marked annexure “C”;
3.12 I confirm that a
copy of the affidavit by the plaintiff, mentioned in paragraph 3.11
above was served on the State Attorney…;
3.13
I respectfully
submit, that the fee
agreement entered between the plaintiff and Hough Bremner Inc,
annexure “B” hereto, represents
my normal fee, taking
cognizance of my years of experience and expertise, as I dealt with
the matter from the outset;
3.14 I respectfully
submit that the payment of the professional fees are not subject to
the successful completion of a claim against
the defendant and I
respectfully refer the above Honorable Court to paragraph 2 of the
agreement of fees as between attorney and
own client, dated 11
September 2015, annexure “B” hereto and therefore it is
not a contingency fee agreement, as contemplated
in the Contingency
Fee Act, 66 of 1997.’
[8]
Further directives emanated from Legodi JP.
The pertinent ones which formed the basis of his judgment were:
‘
2.1.
When was such fee agreed upon?
2.2. When was such fee
paid in total?
2.3. What is the amount
of the fee agreed upon?
2.4. If no fee was paid
or was paid in part, when was such a fee or remaining part thereof
supposed to be paid?
2.5. If no fee was paid,
what is the basis upon which it is alleged no contingency fee
agreement was concluded?’
H&B responded that
the firm was to deliver a comprehensive account at the completion of
the matter, at which time, irrespective
of the outcome of the
litigation, Ms Chiau would be liable to pay the fees.
[9]
Legodi
JP,
mero
motu
,
determined the present matter together with that of
Danny Joseph Sibiya and Others v Road Accident Fund
(
Sibiya
)
[2]
in which a settlement agreement had been concluded between the
parties, and handed down one judgment in respect of both matters.
The
reasons for this approach are unclear save for the finding that the
fee agreements in both matters were in breach of the Act.
Despite
evidence from Mr Sibiya and his attorneys that the fee agreement
entered into was a party and party agreement, the high
court found
otherwise. In
Sibiya
the high court made a number of far reaching orders, none of which
had been sought by the parties. This Court, in setting aside
the
judgment of the high court, held that there was no basis to interpret
the fee agreement as a CFA nor was there any basis to
invoke rule
70(5A)
(d)(
ii)
in the absence of any misconduct on the part of Mr Sibiya or
his attorney at the taxation.
This
Court in
Sibiya
SCA,
[3]
overruled
the high court on a similar basis - lack of
audi
alteram partem
for the parties before the court made far reaching orders affecting
attorneys who were not a party to the action.
Sibiya
was decided together with this case by Legodi JP in chambers.
[10]
On 02 June 2022, the high court delivered
the judgment (the subject of this appeal) and ordered that:
‘
84.1
The fee agreement concluded between [plaintiff] and [her] attorneys
is hereby reviewed and set aside for the reasons set out
in this
judgment;
84.2 The defendant to pay
the costs of litigation to the [plaintiff] on a party and party scale
as agreed between the parties;
84.3 An amount of
R1 034 470.00 awarded to the plaintiff by the defendant to
shall be paid directly to the plaintiff within
90 days from date of
this order and the Road Accident Fund to take reasonable steps to
ensure that the capital amount is directly
paid to the plaintiff;
84.4 The Legal Practice
Council to consider the appropriateness or otherwise of the conduct
of the plaintiff’s attorneys of
record;
84.5 The plaintiff’s
attorneys of record to bring this judgment to the attention of the
plaintiff by explaining the contents
thereof to the plaintiff and to
provide an affidavit by not later than Friday 10 June 2022 confirming
that the order in this paragraph
has been complied with.’
[11]
Thus, contrary to the averments of H&B
and Ms Chiau that the fee agreement was not a CFA within the ambit of
the Act, the high
court found that it was and that it was unlawful
because it did not comply with the formal requirements of the Act.
The high court
thus reviewed and set it aside on that basis. There
are at least three anomalies which arise from the above orders which
were not
sought by any of the parties. One, the RAF has no obligation
to pay the costs to Ms Chiau as ordered. Two, these orders were made
against H&B, when it was not a party to the proceedings and
without it being given an opportunity to be heard on these issues.
Three, it is thus deprived, not only of its right to claim its fees
from its client, but also of its right to recover the costs
from the
RAF. The high court also refused to make a settlement agreement,
concluded between the parties, an order of court.
[12]
As
stated by this Court in
Majope,
‘even if the fee structure agreement was an agreement that was
hit by the
Contingency Fees Act, as
the high court found, that in
itself was not a proper basis to deprive [the attorneys] of the right
to recover their fees for the
services rendered to Ms Majope and Mr
Machabe. It is particularly concerning that these extraordinary
orders were against [the
attorneys] when they were not parties to the
case before the high court.’
[4]
[13]
The
approach of the high court appears to be that any agreement, not
providing for payment of fees by the litigant prior to the
finalisation of litigation, constitutes a CFA within the ambit of the
Act. On authority of the two precedents referred to (
Mucavele
and
Majope
),
this approach is clearly wrong. Legodi JP was entitled to enquire
whether there was a CFA and to have sight of the fee agreement,
in
order to exercise judicial oversight as contemplated by s 4 of the
Act.
[5]
He was not, however,
entitled to ignore the responses he received, clearly stating that
the fee agreement was not a CFA and, without
affording the parties an
opportunity to be heard, declare that the fee agreement was a CFA,
and set it aside.
[14]
Both
merits and quantum had been settled and the matter had been removed
from the roll. Accordingly, what was before the high court?
A
settlement agreement between the parties to the action to be made an
order of the court. Despite this, the high court disregarded
the
principle expressed in
Fischer
and Another v Ramahlele and Others
(
Fischer
),
[6]
where this Court cautioned that it was for the parties to ‘define
the nature of their dispute and it is for the court to
adjudicate
upon those issues’.
[7]
Fischer
also
stated that
,
in
certain instances, a
court may
mero
motu
raise
a question of law if it arises from the evidence and is required for
a decision in the case. But as held in
Mucavele:
‘
The
legality of the contingency fee arrangement was not such a question.
Most
recently, in the
Road
Accident Fund v MKM obo KM and Another
;
Road
Accident Fund v NM obo CM and Another,
this
Court clarified
that
a contingency fee agreement ‘is a bilateral agreement between
the legal practitioner and his or her client. It has nothing
to do
with a party against whom the client has a claim.’ Furthermore,
an invalid or unlawful contingency fee agreement would
not
necessarily invalidate the underlying settlement agreement. The high
court failed to consider whether the validity of the contingency
fee
agreement was severable from the rest of the settlement
agreement.’
[8]
[15]
The
high court erred in the same manner in this case. For this and the
other reasons set out above, the order by the high court
ought to be
set aside. It is opportune after four appeals from the same court, on
more or less the same facts,
[9]
to state that there is at this stage sufficient authority that,
first, a fee agreement that provides that the fees and disbursements
due to an attorney be paid on the finalisation of a matter is not
necessarily a CFA which stands to be set aside for non-compliance
with the Act. Second, and, as stated in
Mucavele
,
in any event, ‘
an
invalid or unlawful contingency fee agreement would not necessarily
invalidate the underlying settlement agreement
’
.
[16]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
settlement agreement concluded between the parties on 7 March 2022 is
made an order of court.’
___________________
S E
WEINER
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the appellant:
Heads of Argument prepared by J G
Cilliers SC
Instructed
by: Hough
& Bremner Inc, Mbombela
Pieter
Skein Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the
respondent: No opposition was filed by
the Respondent
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Nelspruit
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Mucavele
and Another v MEC for Health, Mpumalanga Province
(889/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 129
(11 October 2023) (
Mucavele
)
;
Majope and Others v The Road Accident Fund
(663/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 145
(
Majope
);
Sibiya
v
Road Accident Fund: In the matter of Chiau v Road Accident Fund
(557/2016 1150/20) [2022] ZAMPMBHC 40 (2 June 2022) (
Sibiya)
–
overruled
by this Court in
Dannya Joseph Sibiya and Others v Road Accident Fund
(1067/2022)
[2023]
ZASCA 171
(05
December 2023) (
Sibiya
SCA
);
three from Legodi JP and one from Roelofse J.
[2]
Fn
1 above.
[3]
Fn
1
[4]
Majope
fn
1
para
11.
[5]
4.
Settlement
‘
(1)
Any offer of settlement made to any party who has entered into a
contingency fees agreement, may be accepted after the legal
practitioner has filed an affidavit with the court, if the matter is
before court, or has filed an affidavit with the professional
controlling body, if the matter is not before court, stating—
(a)
the full terms of
the settlement;
(b)
an estimate of the
amount or other relief that may be obtained by taking the matter to
trial;
(c)
an estimate of the
chances of success or failure at trial;
(d)
an outline of the
legal practitioner’s fees if the matter is settled as compared
to taking the matter to trial;
(e)
the reasons why the
settlement is recommended;
(f)
that the matters
contemplated in paragraphs (a) to (e) were explained to the client,
and the steps taken to ensure that the client
understands the
explanation; and
(g)
that the legal
practitioner was informed by the client that he or she understands
and accepts the terms of the settlement.
(2)
The affidavit referred to in subsection (1) must be accompanied by
an affidavit by the client, stating—
(a)
that he or she was
notified in writing of the terms of the settlement;
(b)
that the terms of
the settlement were explained to him or her and that he or she
understands and agrees to them; and
(c)
his or her attitude
to the settlement.
(3)
Any settlement made where a contingency fees agreement has been
entered into, shall be made an order of court, if the matter
was
before court.’
[6]
Fischer
and Another v Ramahlele and Others
[2014]
ZASCA 88; 2014 (4) SA 614 (SCA); [2014] 3 All SA 395 (SCA).
[7]
Ibid para 13
.
See
also
Bliss
Brand (Pty) Ltd v Advertising Regulatory Board NPC and Others
[2023] ZACC 19
;
2023 (10) BCLR 1153
(CC) and further authorities
cited in that judgment;
De
Nysschen v Government Employees Pension Fund and Others
(864/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 147
(09 November 2023
)
.
[8]
Mucavele
fn
1 paras 15 and 16
[9]
Cases
referred to in f
n
1.
sino noindex
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