Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 103South Africa
Love v Attorneys' Fidelity Fund Board of Control and Others (07793/15) [2024] ZAGPJHC 103 (18 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 January 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Love v Attorneys' Fidelity Fund Board of Control and Others (07793/15) [2024] ZAGPJHC 103 (18 January 2024)
Love v Attorneys' Fidelity Fund Board of Control and Others (07793/15) [2024] ZAGPJHC 103 (18 January 2024)
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sino date 18 January 2024
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE NO: 07793/15
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
18 January 2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
RODNEY
ADRIAN
LOVE
Applicant
and
ATTORNEYS’
FIDELITY FUND BOARD OF
CONTROL
First Respondent
THE MINISTER OF
JUSTICE OF THE REPUBLIC
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Second
Respondent
THE LAW SOCIETY OF THE
NORTHERN
PROVINCES
SOUTH AFRICA
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
S. VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
I consider it important to
refer to the exact wording of the first three paragraphs of the
Notice of Motion issued on 3 March 2016
in this matter. It reads as
follows:
“
TAKE NOTICE
that RODNEY ADRIAN LOVE (hereinafter referred to as "the
applicant”) intends to apply to the above Honourable
Court for
an Order in the following terms:
1 The first
respondent's decision rejecting the applicant's claim in terms of
Section 26(a) of the Attorney's Act, Act 53 of 1979
(hereinafter
referred to as "the Act”), lodged on 7 October 2013
against the Attorney's Fidelity Fund is set aside;
2
The first respondent is ordered to consider the applicant's claim in
terms of Section 26(a) of the Act,
on the basis that
sufficient notice was given thereof in terms of Section 48(1)(a) read
with Section 48(2) of the Act;
Altematively
to paragraphs 1 and 2
above and in the event of the Court finding that the applicant failed
to comply with the provisions of Section
48(1)(a) of the Act:
3.1
The decision by the first respondent not to extend the
period referred to in Section 48(1)(a) of the Act to and including 7
October
2013, is hereby reviewed and set aside
;
3.2
The date, in terms Section 48(1)(a) of the Act, by when
notice of the applicant's claim is to be given to the first
respondent,
in terms of which notice is to be given, is hereby
extended until and including 7 October 2013, in terms of the
provisions of Section
48(2) of the Act;
”
(emphases supplied).
[2]
The said notice includes
further alternative relief to the effect that section 48(1)(a) should
be declared unconstitutional.
[3]
From the above it is
abundantly clear that sections 26 read with sections 48(1)(a) and
section 48(2) of the Act are invoked.
[4]
The aforesaid motion was
instituted on 3 March 2015.
[5]
An unusual feature of this
matter is that the original main relief initially sought in terms of
section 26 read with section 48(1)(a)
of the Act was not pursued in
terms of the motion, but by way of an action instituted on 13 August
2015 under case number 2015/28901.
I will deal with the pre-trial
events and the fate of the action below.
[6]
As a consequence of the
final outcome of that action in the SCA (after a trial by Mokose AJ,
a further hearing by a Full Court and
an abortive appeal to the
Constitutional Court pursuant to the SCA hearing) two substantive
issues in the motion before me have
not yet been adjudicated.
[7]
The first is prayers 3.1
and 3.2 which I treat as one, and the second is the constitutionality
of section 48(1)(a) of the Act.
[8]
A third related issue
which arises from the papers before me is the issue of the applicant
filing its heads of argument out of time.
Since such enquiry involves
inter alia
determining whether it is in the interests of justice to do so and
the latter in turn includes the prospects of success in the
matter, I
will deal with same last.
[9]
I should mention that due
to an additional error (which is addressed in a supplementary
affidavit) by the applicant’s Johannesburg
correspondent the
applicant’s heads of argument was even further delayed which in
turn led to a consequential delay by the
first respondent in filing
its heads of argument. The latter delay was resolved by agreement
between the parties and hence same
was filed on 1 July 2022. The
applicant’s delays it would appear were never condoned and
hence the need to consider same
remains.
[10]
For the sake of
convenience, the applicant will be referred to as “Love”,
the first respondent as “the Fund”,
the second respondent
as “the Minister. The third respondent, where necessary, as
“the Law Society”. Only Love,
the Fund and the Minister
took an active part in the litigation before me.
[11]
I should point out that
the Act has been superseded by the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
on 1
November 2018. The Fund in its earlier form ceased to exist, all
assets, rights, liabilities and obligations which on 1 November
2018,
vested in the former Fund, vested in the Legal Practitioners Fidelity
Fund Board in terms of
section 61
of the
Legal Practice Act. The
Fund
that existed under the Act thus continued in existence as the Legal
Practitioners Fidelity Fund and all rights and obligations
that
vested in the Fund on 1 November 2018 continued as rights and
obligations of the Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund as provided
for
in
section 53
of the
Legal Practice Act.
>
[12]
Given that the
Legal
Practice Act has
no retroactive application, and as the material
facts that gave rise to Love's claim, which is the subject of this
application,
occurred before 1 November 2018, the provisions of the
Act, not the
Legal Practice Act, are
to be applied in the
determination of that claim. The relevant provisions of the Act are
section 26 read with sections 48(1)(a)
and section 48(2) of the Act.
[13]
This Court has
jurisdiction in the matter by virtue of section 49(4) of the Act
coupled with the fact that the alleged theft took
place within its
jurisdiction.
BACKGROUND
[14]
This matter has a lengthy
and tortuous background, and it is necessary to refer thereto in some
detail.
[15]
Love deposited an amount
of R10 million into the trust account of practising attorneys
Turnbull & Associates Incorporated. It
practised as a firm of
attorneys in terms of the provisions of the Act and kept a separate
trust banking account at Nedbank, being
an institution in the
Republic of South Africa. Love ascertained that the name and style of
the trust account operated by Turnbull
& Associates Incorporated
was known as “
Turnbull
& Associates Trust Account
”.
It was a trust account opened by Turnbull & Associates
Incorporated at the Nedbank Business North Rand Branch,
Code 146905
with account number 1[...]. The theft, being the subject matter of
the proceedings against the Fund, took place in
North Rand or
Bryanston, within the jurisdiction of this Court.
[16]
On 7 October 2013, Love’s
attorneys served a notice of claim against the Fund. This notice does
not refer to any of the relevant
provisions in the Act. The notice
itself, annexure RL1 to the founding affidavit, is in the form of an
affidavit, dated 20 September
2013. As a minimum it can be read as a
notice in terms of section 48(1)(a) but that does not mean that the
Fund may not have a
duty to consider the applicability of section
48(2).
[17]
The purpose of the notice
was to claim an amount of R10 million from the Fund by virtue of the
fact that the R10 million, that was
deposited into the aforesaid
trust account, was stolen by a person in the employ of the said
attorneys and who Love subsequently
ascertained was allowed to
utilise the said attorneys’ trust account as if it was his own
account. This was highly
irregular and unlawful.
Context
within which the R10 million was paid into trust and released.
[18]
Love was offered an
opportunity, during February 2011, following discussions between
Pavoncelli and one Keith Mountjoy (“Mountjoy”)
and other
persons, to purchase shares in Sword Fern Trading.
[19]
The shares he was offered
belonged to a company called Centrosphere and he would have purchased
the shares from this company. He
was presented with a written
document called a memorandum of understanding setting out certain
parameters of a possible agreement
of purchase of the shares.
Notwithstanding the fact that no agreement of sale had been
concluded, he was persuaded by Pavoncelli
to make payment of the
purchase price of the shares into the aforesaid trust account pending
finalisation of the sale of shares
agreement. Love accepted the
bona
fides
of the said
attorneys’ firm at the time and he accepted that, if the money
was paid into the trust account of an attorney,
it would be as safe
as if in the bank and he consequently obliged the request by
Pavoncelli.
[20]
The claim against the Fund
is based on the fact that the R10 million was stolen. Love states in
this Affidavit that during April
2011 he made payment of the R10
million into the said trust account as he was persuaded to do by one
Pavoncelli, who he subsequently
ascertained was either employed by
Turnbull & Associates Incorporated or was allowed by Turnbull &
Associates Incorporated
to operate an attorneys practice under the
guise of Turnbull & Associates Incorporated. The aforesaid
explanation emanated
from information obtained during an insolvency
enquiry into the affairs of a liquidated company called Sword Fern
Trading (Pty)
Limited (hereinafter referred to as Sword Fern
Trading), which later changed its name to Echo Globe Lighting
Solutions (Pty) Limited.
[21]
At the time, he was
unaware of the fact that some or other business relationship between
Pavoncelli and Turnbull & Associates
Incorporated existed. He
later ascertained that there was some kind of relationship when he
met with an attorney, Michael Trapido
(hereinafter Trapido) who was
apparently an attorney in the practice. Trapido later disclosed
that the attorney Turnbull,
whose practice it initially was, was no
longer involved in the practice and it was Trapido who was in charge
of the practice. However,
Trapido advised that he was doing mainly
criminal work and was hardly attending to the practice and Pavoncelli
was, for all intents
and purposes, in control of the practice.
[22]
Apart from being persuaded
to deposit R10 million into the aforesaid attorneys’ trust
account, Pavoncelli, in addition, persuaded
Love to lend and advance
an amount of R4 289 520 to the company in which he was
going to purchase shares.
[23]
Love became concerned
about all the business dealings due to various things that happened.
More particularly, discussions that he
had with Pavoncelli regarding
the finalisation of the share agreement resulted in him arranging a
meeting with Mountjoy who he
was led to believe was a shareholder in
Sword Fern Trading. On 3 August 2011, he met with Mountjoy at the
East Rand Mall and, during
the meeting they had, Love advised him
that he required repayment of all the monies that he had already
paid. Mountjoy gave Love
an undertaking to revert to him relating to
a repayment plan in respect of the monies that he had paid. At that
stage, he was totally
unaware as to what happened to the monies that
he had paid but was assured by Mountjoy that the monies would be
repaid to him by
the company (presumably Sword Fern Trading).
[24]
Mountjoy failed to revert
to him with a plan for repayment of all the monies paid by him. Love
thereafter engaged attorneys in the
matter and ultimately an
application for the liquidation of Sword Fern Trading was issued and,
at the same time, an action was
instituted against Turnbull &
Associates. Both these proceedings were launched on 31 October
2011. The action invoked
a tacit agreement to the effect that
Turnbull & Associates would deal with the R10 million in
accordance with Love’s
instructions and mandate and alleges
that it was paid out in breach of the tacit agreement. These
allegations were met by a defence
that the R10 million was held
subject to instructions of both Centrosphere 67 and Love and was
subsequently paid out in accordance
with instructions of both so as
to settle part payment of the shares allegedly acquired by Love in
Sword Fern Trading.
[25]
Love states that
Pavoncelli persisted with the allegation that he did not steal Love’s
money and that the monies were obtained
by Centrosphere 67 following
the sale of shares in Sword Fern Trading. Pavoncelli even went as far
as to register Love as a director
of Sword Fern Trading. This
Pavoncelli achieved by forging Love’s signature.
The
Liquidation Application and undertakings by Pavoncelli
[26]
Pavoncelli, acting as a
director of Sword Fern Trading, opposed the application for the
liquidation and a number of affidavits were
filed. Pavoncelli
persuaded the Court to postpone the liquidation application on a
number of occasions based on a promise to make
payment of an amount
of R4 289 520, being the money lent to the company. Once
the promise to make payment did not materialise,
Pavoncelli, in a
final bid to obtain a further postponement of the liquidation
application, signed a letter of undertaking on 15
May 2012 in terms
whereof he undertook to personally make payment of all the amounts
that Love had paid, i e the amounts that
Love paid in respect of
the loan that was made to the company as well as the R10 million paid
into the trust account of Turnbull
& Associates Incorporated.
A copy of the said undertaking, RL2, is annexed to the founding
affidavit.
[27]
Pavoncelli bound himself
personally to make payment of the following amounts to Love:
“
1.
…
1.1
…
1.2
R10 million (Ten Million Rand) together with interest at a rate of
15.5% per annum compounded
monthly in advance calculated from 1 April
2011 being in respect of monies deposited by Rodney Adrian Love into
the trust account
of Turnbull & Associates Incorporated
Attorneys, which amount for the purposes contemplated herein, is to
be regarded as being
due, owing and payable, which payment shall be
made against written confirmation from Love that he has no right,
title or interest
in any shares in Echo Globe Lighting Solutions
(Pty) Limited and the signature by Love of all documents reasonably
required in
confirmation of the above;
1.3
…
2.
This undertaking does not constitute a waiver of the rights of Rodney
Adrian Love to proceed with
the winding up application under case
number 2011/21324 or the action instituted under case number
2011/21323 in the event that
I fail to make payment in terms of this
undertaking nor does it constitute a novation of the original debt.
3.
I undertake to make payment of the amount specified in clause 1.1,
1.2 and 1.3 above by no later
than Thursday 17 May 2012 and the
amount specified in terms of 1.4 immediately upon taxation of the
bill of costs.
”
[28]
Prior to offering to make
payment of the amount set out in RL2, Pavoncelli persuaded Love that
he was able to honour this undertaking
and provided him with a
statement of assets and liabilities as at 30 April 2012, a copy of
which is annexed as RL3. According to
this statement, his assets
amounted to R64 900 000 and his liabilities were only
R14 080 000, leaving a net
surplus of R50 820 000.
Pavoncelli reflected various luxury cars that he owns on annexure
RL3. Love personally saw him
riding around in a Ferrari motor vehicle
and he had no reason to doubt, at that particular point in time, that
the undertaking,
as set out in RL2, would not be met.
[29]
Following the signing of
the undertaking, Pavoncelli made payment of the amount of R2 000 000
to Love in reduction of
the loan to the company. He failed to honour
the undertaking as set out in annexure RL2 and, as a consequence
thereof, Love proceeded
with the application for the liquidation of
Sword Fern Trading and obtained the final winding up order of the
company on 12 June
2012.
[30]
Thereafter, an insolvency
enquiry was held during 2013 where Trapido, Pavoncelli and Turnbull
were interrogated. Due to the fact
that Love was advised that the
enquiry was a secret enquiry and that the contents of such an enquiry
cannot be disclosed, there
is no evidence about what transpired at
the enquiry. Be that as it may, he had already obtained from Trapido
a copy of the bank
statements relating to the trust account of
Turnbull & Associates Incorporated. Trapido approached him and
was very concerned
about what was going to happen to him and Turnbull
as attorneys.
[31]
Although the trust account
showed that the R10 million was paid out of the trust account, it was
not possible to determine what
happened to the monies. The trust
account indicated that the monies were paid to the business account
of Turnbull & Associates
Incorporated. Trapido was apparently
unable to obtain copies of the business cheque account of Turnbull &
Associates and hence
Love could therefore not establish what happened
to the monies after they were transferred out of the trust account
and into the
business account. He also could not determine
whether Centrosphere was paid for the shares that Pavoncelli
contended Love
had “purchased”. Consequently, it was
necessary to obtain copies of the bank statements of the business
account of
Turnbull & Associates Incorporated in order to see
whether or not the monies that were taken out of the trust account of
Turnbull
& Associates were in fact stolen.
[32]
On 2 September 2013, and
following the insolvency enquiry and subpoenas issued by Love’s
attorneys, he obtained copies of
the business cheque account of
Turnbull & Associates Incorporated. Once the copies of the cheque
account were obtained, it
became clear to him that the R10 million
that he paid into the trust account was in fact stolen by Pavoncelli.
By virtue of the
theft, a claim was lodged with the Fund.
The
inquiry by the Fund
[33]
On 24 July 2014, the Fund
held an enquiry in terms of the Regulations and Love was interrogated
regarding the claim he had submitted.
One of the aspects that was
raised was whether or not the claim that he had submitted was
submitted within the three-month period
provided for in section
48(1)(a) of the Act. Love contended that he did submit the claim
within the three-month period and pointed
out, in particular, that
the theft could only have been established after he had received the
business cheque account bank statements
from Nedbank, which date was
2 September 2013.
[34]
The statements were
provided in September 2013 with a date stamp from the bank of 2
September 2013. All the bank statements contained
the Nedbank date
stamp of 2 September 2013 and same is attached to the founding
affidavit as RL4, being bank statements number
294 to 301. A complete
set of the bank statements was provided to the Fund.
[35]
The entries in the bank
statements reflected that, after the monies were transferred into the
cheque account of Turnbull & Associates,
it was not used to pay
Centrosphere 67 but was utilised to pay Pavoncelli, third parties and
to pay various other expenses of Turnbull
& Associates.
[36]
In Love’s view and
having regard to what was said during the enquiry, he experienced the
Fund enquiry as very hostile. He
acknowledges that he may be
incorrect, but that’s how he experienced the interrogation and
the questions asked and the general
attitude at the enquiry. He
attended the enquiry to provide the Fund with as much information as
he had to assist in the
claim that he had lodged. He could not
understand the attitude displayed because he thought that the Fund
was there to protect
members of the public against attorneys who
steal money from the public. He did not realise that the apparent
intention of his
interrogators was to find a loophole in his claim.
[37]
After receipt from the
bank of the business statements of September 2013, Love contends he
established that theft had in fact taken
place and that his previous
suspicions that he had relating to the possible misappropriation of
the money were in fact correct.
It was only in September 2013 that he
was able to establish that the money paid into the trust account had
been stolen.
How
section 48(2) became relevant
[38]
Apart from the fact that
the Fund in my view should from the outset have considered section
48(2) once they concluded that section
48(1)(a) was not complied
with, given the nature of these sections another event brought
section 48(2) into play. As a consequence
of the hostile reception
Love received at the Fund enquiry, he personally engaged in
correspondence with the Fund and, on 3 July
2014, he requested
his attorney of record to address a letter to the Fund setting out
his concerns. A copy of that letter is dated
31 July 2014 and is
annexed as annexure RL5.
[39]
Paragraph 12 of this
letter reads as follows:
“
Having
regard to the judgement, and that the fund is a fund of last resort,
we can see no reason why our client's claim can be rejected
in terms
of the provisions of section 48
nor,
in the event that factually our client's claim was submitted outside
of the three month period (which is denied), that there
exists good
reason not to extend the applicable time limits, having regard to the
merits of our client's case.
(emphases supplied).
[40]
It is contended, on behalf
of Love, that, from RL5, the court will notice that he adopted the
stance that notice was given to the
Fund within the three-month
period after he established that the theft of money had occurred. In
addition, the attorney, acting
on behalf of Love, requested that the
Fund act in terms of the provisions of section 48(2) of the Act and
to extend the period
of time, as it is entitled to in terms of the
provisions of section 48(2) of the Act, which reads as follows:
“
If the Board of
Control is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances, a
claim or the proof required by the Board has
been
lodged or
furnished as soon as practical, it may in its discretion extend any
of the periods referred to in subsection (1).
”
(emphases supplied).
[41]
Although Love’s
attorney did not specifically refer to section 48(2) of the Act, he
could hardly have had any other section
of the Act in mind when he
stated that good reasons existed to extend the period of time having
regard to the merits of Love’s
claim.
[42]
On 4 September 2014, the
Fund advised Love that it rejected his claim and stated as follows:
“
Further to
previous correspondence herein, I wish to advise that the Fund’s
board of control has resolved that this claim
be rejected, on the
grounds that the requirements of Section 48(1)(a) have not been met.
The above reason for rejection may not
be exhaustive and all of the
Fund’s rights are fully reserved in the event of it at a later
stage appearing that additional
grounds for rejection of other
defences may exist.
”
[43]
A copy of the aforesaid is
annexed to the founding affidavit as annexure RL6.
[44]
On 20 January 2015, Love’s
attorney addressed a letter to the Fund requesting written reasons
for the Fund’s rejection
of Love’s claim. This request
was directed in terms of section 5(1) of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
(PAJA). Although this request
was made outside the 90 days provided for in section 5(1) the letter
specifically states that:
“
4 We appreciate
that this request is made outside the 90 (ninety) days provided for
in the said Section. However, we require the
reasons at this point in
time, failing which we will have to apply to Court for an Order that
the reasons must be provided.”
[45]
Same is annexed as
annexure RL7.
[46]
On 18 February 2015, the
Fund responded to the request and stated as follows:
“
The reasons for
rejection are as follows:
1.
In an affidavit deposed by your client on 28 November 2012, he states
that: -
1.1
Pavoncelli had personally misappropriated the R10 million which is
now claimed from the
Fund;
1.2
Pavoncelli had signing powers on the trust account of Tumbull &
Associates Inc (Tumbull) and that
he had paid amounts of R4 million
and R2 million on 2 April 2012 and a further amount of R4 million
into the said trust account
on 4 April 2012;
1.3
Pavoncelli had transferred monies out of that trust account into the
business account of
Tumbull, beginning on 4 April 2012 in an amount
of R500000.00 and had again transferred monies out of the said trust
account into
the said business account on 11 April 2012 in amounts of
R1 million, R26 081.32, R19 000.00 and R5 490.00;
1.4
On 12 April 2012 similarly transferred amounts of R200 000.00 and R6
550.00 respectively, and on 13
April 2012 amounts of R300 000.00, R23
800.00, R13 313.00 and finally on 16 April 2012 two amounts of
R6 200.00 and R350 000.00,
respectively.
1.5
Moreover, your client attached to his aforesaid affidavit copies of
the bank statements of Michael
Trapido Trust which he knew to be the
same account as the Turnbull trust account — account number
1[...] held with Nedbank,
dated 21 November 2012 for the period from
1 March 2011 to 31 October 2011. A perusal of those bank statements
shows that the first
deposit of R4 million on 2 April 2011, not 2
April 2012, and that the dates of all the other deposits referred to
in the affidavit
were in 2011, not 2012.
1.6
lt is clear that prior to the first deposit by your client in the
amount of R4 million,
the balance in the Turnbull trust account was
R55 162-14 and that after the last deposit of R4 million on 4 April
2011, the balance
was R'l0 060 322-30 and that the deposits made into
that trust account by parties other than your client for the period
between
2 April 2011 and 4 April 2011 were negligible.
1.7
Furthermore it is evident that although no further noteworthy
deposits were made to the account, the
entire R10 million deposited
by your client had been stripped out of the account by the end of
July 2011 and that large amounts
had been transferred periodically to
the business account of Tumbull in the period between 4 April 2011
and 28 July 2011.
1.8
Pavoncelli made the offer on 15 May 2012 to him because Pavoncelli
had misappropriated the R10 million.
2.
lt is clear then that your client already knew by no later than 28
November 2012, and probably
as early as 15 May 2012, that his monies
had been stolen by Pavoncelli. Your client's claim was therefore
submitted well outside
of the three months of him having acquired
actual knowledge of the theft as is prescribed in section 48(1)(a) of
the Attorneys
Act, No 53 of 1979.
Please
note that that the reasons given above may not be exhaustive and that
the Fund's rights are fully reserved in the event of
it later
appearing that additional grounds for rejection of the claim may
exist.”
[47]
A copy of the aforesaid
reasons was provided on 18 February 2015 and are annexed as RL8.
[48]
It is contended that the
reasons advanced by the Fund are incorrect. Love stands by his
approach that it was not until he had received
the bank statements in
respect of the business cheque account of Turnbull & Associates
that he was able to ascertain that the
theft had taken place. Monies
drawn out of the trust account are not, by virtue of that fact,
classified as theft. Love continues
that the court will recall that
Pavoncelli maintained that he had paid Centrosphere 67 for the
shares. All that the bank statements
relating to the trust account
could demonstrate was that the monies from the trust were withdrawn
account. He was, however, unable
to state what happened to the money
subsequent to the withdrawal from the trust account and it was only
once he had obtained the
business cheque accounts in September 2013
that he was able to establish that theft had taken place.
[49]
Love further contends that
the statement on behalf of the Fund, that he was properly aware of
the theft as early as 15 May 2012,
stems from the fact that that is
the date when Pavoncelli signed the letter of undertaking. Love
contends that nowhere in the letter
of undertaking does it remotely
appear that the money was unlawfully stolen. In fact,
Pavoncelli contended that the amount
was utilised in order to make
payment of the shares that Love allegedly purchased in the company,
Echo Globe Lighting Solutions
(Pty) Limited.
[50]
Love further explains that
the allegations relating to the contents of his affidavit dated 28
November 2012 emanated from an affidavit
that he made in provisional
sentence summons proceedings that he instituted against Pavoncelli
based on the letter of undertaking
signed by Pavoncelli on 15 May
2012. The incorrect dates in this affidavit as to when he paid the
R10million into the relevant
trust account is clearly erroneous but
can hardly be held against him in these proceedings given the
contents of the affidavit
that constitutes the claim lodged against
the Fund.
The
provisional sentence proceedings
[51]
After Pavoncelli did not
honour the undertaking as set out in his letter of undertaking, a
provisional sentence summons was issued
against Pavoncelli, claiming
payment of the amounts that he had undertaken to pay. Pavoncelli
filed an answering affidavit in the
provisional sentence proceedings,
a copy of which is annexed as RL9. In this answering affidavit, three
defences are raised:
51.1
defences relating to the
National Credit Act;
51.2
defence of
lis
alibi pendens
; and
51.3
a defence which he calls a
“defence on the merits”.
[52]
Insofar as the defence
relating to the
lis
alibi pendens
is
concerned, Pavoncelli states that Turnbull & Associates
Incorporated and he are in fact one and the same person and says
that:
“
8.10 It is
furthermore clear from that which is more fully referred to above
that but for the fact that the plaintiff had deposited
the funds into
the trust account of Turnbull, the plaintiff would have looked
directly to me for the repayment of the sum of RI0
000 000.00 since
for all intents and purposes, the plaintiff regarded Tumbull as
simply my alter ego and an institution which had
acted In a
facilitatory position. The plaintiff was nevertheless precluded by
law, from instituting legal proceedings against me
personally and
accordingly, in law, was obliged to institute action against
Turnbull.
8.11 l was accordingly
in law sufficiently identified with Turnbull and l was regarded and
being a so-called “privy"
of Turnbull. I was for all
intents and purposes deemed to be the same person as Turnbull and was
privy to the parties in the second
action."
[53]
Love responded to
Pavoncelli’s answering affidavit in the provisional sentence
proceedings, a copy of which is annexed as
RL10. The Fund is now
relying on what is stated in RL10 in order to substantiate its
submission that, in the latter affidavit,
Love admitted that the
theft had occurred. Love submits that, as appears from the affidavit,
this statement is incorrect. The relevant
passage in this affidavit
reads as follows:
“
The reason why
he has undertaken to make payment of this amount is because he has
personally misappropriated the R10 million as
appears from what I set
out hereunder.
”
[54]
The “misappropriation”
alluded to here was not necessarily tantamount to theft. Love
thereafter set out, in the same
affidavit, the various withdrawals
from the trust account and states that:
“
I
further refer the Court to the various transfers into the account of
Turnbull and respectfully submit that it is clearly demonstrated
that
the amount paid into the attorneys’ trust account being
administered by the defendant, was
improperly
used
by the defendant.
”
(my emphasis)
[55]
Love contends he could not
at that point in time have known that the money was stolen nor could
he, by the exercise of reasonable
care, have become aware of the
theft. In his view, he simply had no facts at his disposal to have
concluded that the theft had
occurred or that he could have become
aware that the theft had occurred. Love states that he did not know
what happened to the
money once it had been transferred out of the
trust account of Turnbull & Associates Incorporated. Nowhere in
the affidavit
made by Pavoncelli, is it even remotely suggested that
he
unlawfully
took the
money.
[56]
Hence Love disputed the
stance by the Fund that he knew by no later than 28 November 2012 and
probably as early as 15 May 2012 that
the monies were stolen by
Pavoncelli.
[57]
For the purposes of the
present application, I need not deal with this any further, other
than to state that execution steps were
taken against Pavoncelli in
terms of a court order annexed as RL11 and it appeared that
Pavoncelli did not have the assets as represented
or the assets have
been bonded and/or leased.
[58]
Love states that from what
he has set out above it is clear that, he tried his best to recover
by means of legal process the R10
000 000.00 (that was paid into the
attorneys' trust account as stated previously). Eventually he
obtained judgments which have
not realised any income.
[59]
His primary point in the
affidavit remains thereafter that it is clear that it was not until
September 2013 that he became
aware that a theft had occurred and
that he could not do anything prior to receipt of the business
cheques account statements of
Turnbull & Associates Incorporated
to establish whether or not a theft had taken place.
[60]
In the circumstances he
submits that there was compliance with section 48(1)(a) of the Act
and, in the event of the Court in considering
the facts being of the
view that notice was not within the three-month period, he requests
that the Court extends the three-month
period and issues an order in
terms of the notice of motion that it is reasonable to accept that it
was not until he obtained the
bank statements in September 2013 that
he could have known that the money was stolen i.e. that the period in
terms of section 48(1)(a)
should be extended in terms of section
48(2).
[61]
Love further contends
that, from the reasoning advanced by the Fund, it is clear that,
despite the request by his attorney in the
letter dated 31 July
2014, annexure RL5, that the Fund exercises its discretion in terms
of section 48(2) of the Act and extends
the period until 7 October
2013 on the basis that there exists good reason to extend the
applicable time limits, having regard
to the merits of Love’s
case, the Fund has decided not to extend the date for the filing of
the claim until 7 October 2013.
Only in the alternative does he
submit that the provisions of section 48(1)(a) of the Act is
unconstitutional.
[62]
He further contends that
in terms of the provisions of PAJA the Court is entitled to set aside
the Fund’s decision and rejection
of his claim. He submits that
the Act is of application by virtue of the fact that what the Fund
did is an administrative action
as defined in section 1 of PAJA. The
Fund took a decision by exercising a public power or by performing a
public function in terms
of an empowering position as he has already
stated. He submits that the Court is entitled to review that
administrative action
taken by the Fund by virtue of the provisions
of sections 6(2)(e)(ii), (iii), (v) and (vi). He also submits that
the decision and
the action of the Fund was not rationally connected
to the information before it as envisaged in section 6(2)(f)(ii) and
(cc).
Hence, Love requests that the Court, in terms of the provisions
of section 6(1) of PAJA, reviews the administrative action taken
by
the Fund. He also annexes an affidavit by his attorney, marked RL12,
confirming what he had stated.
[63]
Love specifically states
that the Fund in taking the decision, prevents action against itself
to proceed. There is a potential claim
of R10 000 000.00 which
is brought against the Fund. If it is able to prevent the claim from
proceeding by virtue of the decision
that it has taken, no further
action can be taken and the Fund therefore stultifies and prevents
further legal action to be taken
against it for the recovery of the
amount that was paid into the attorneys' trust account. The reasons
that were advanced for the
taking of the decision, is with respect,
not borne out by the objective facts and it is submitted that the
decision was taken:
63.1
Because the Fund was
biased or should reasonably be suspected of bias, because irrelevant
considerations were taken into account
and relevant considerations
were not considered;
63.2
In bad faith, arbitrarily
or capriciously and the action itself was not rationally connected to
the information before the Fund.
[64]
Consequently, Love request
that the Court, in terms of the provisions of Section 6(1) of PAJA
reviews the administrative action
taken by the first respondent. He
clearly regards the failure to invoke and apply section 48(2) as an
administrative decision.
[65]
It is also clear from the
background and other litigation as well as the submissions made in
argument before me that the review
is aimed at the extension provided
for in section 48(2) given that the SCA has already decided the
status of Love’s claim
in terms of section 48(1)(a) of the Act
in
The
Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board of Control v Love
(Case
No 170/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 44
(14 April 2021).
THE HIGH COURT ACTION
[66]
As stated above the
aforesaid decision came about after Love
instituted
proceedings in the South Gauteng Division of the High Court
(the trial court) for payment of the R10 million.
According to
the SCA report the action against the Fund was instituted on “13
August 2013”. I should point out that
paragraph 4 of the SCA
judgment states that the proceedings were instituted on the aforesaid
date but same must be a typographical
error. On that date the Fund
had not even been notified about the claim (as is evident from
paragraph 3 of the SCA judgment) or
even rejected the claim, which
decision was only made on 4 September 2014. The late PAJA request for
reasons were only made on
20 January 2015 and the Fund only provided
the reasons in response hereto on 18 February 2015. I am
fortified in the view
that same is a typographical error given that
Love’s legal representative filed a detailed chronology listing
the correct
dates in respect of the above events and the Fund’s
legal representatives accepted same as correct. In its own heads of
argument,
the Fund indicates that the action was instituted on 13
August 2015.
[67]
In
a special plea, the Fund pleaded:
‘
2.
Plaintiff’s failure to comply with section 48(1)(a) of the
Attorneys Act, 1979.
. . .
2.7 The aforesaid
accounts clearly show, and the plaintiff would accordingly reasonably
have known, that although no further noteworthy
deposits were made to
the said trust account, the entire R10 000 000.00 deposited by
the plaintiff had been stripped out of
that account by the end of
July 2011 and large amounts had been transferred periodically to the
business account of Turnbull &
Associates [sic Incorporated] in
the period between 4 April 2011 and 28 July 2011;
2.8 Accordingly, there
was clearly an objective basis for the plaintiff’s stated
conviction that Pavoncelli had misappropriated
the R10 000
000.00 that he, the plaintiff, had deposited, which objective basis
and stated conviction establish actual knowledge
of the plaintiff
that the monies he had deposited, as aforesaid, had been stolen;
2.9 Consequently, the
plaintiff already knew by no later than 28 November 2012, and
probably as early as 15 May 2012, that his monies
had been stolen by
Pavoncelli but only submitted his claim to the defendant on 7 October
2013, well outside of the three months
of him having acquired actual
knowledge of the theft as is prescribed in section 48(1)(a) of the
Attorneys Act, 1979 and, in the
premises, the plaintiff’s claim
did not meet the mandatory requirements of the said section and was
rightly rejected by the
defendant”
[68]
The
trial was heard by Mokose AJ. In an oral judgment read on 19 June
2017, Mokose AJ dismissed the special plea and granted judgment
in
favour of Mr Love. I should mention that it is clear from the
Condonation Application for the late filing of the applicant’s
heads of argument that Makose AJ dealt with 4 special pleas raised by
the Fund and only one of these special pleas was ultimately
decided
by the SCA on Appeal.
[69]
The
special pleas unsurprisingly included a defence of
lis
alibi pendens
,
Love’s failure to comply with section 48(1)(a) of the Act, the
lack of entrustment, that Pavoncelli did not act in the course
and
scope of the practice of an attorney
[1]
and that the monies constituted an investment by Love and The Fund
was not liable for such loss. After the Fund abandoned the defence
of
lis
alibi pendens
the
trial proceeded, and all four special pleas were dismissed.
[2]
A copy of Mokose AJ’s judgment is annexed to the Fund’s
answering affidavit as JLSCA “1”. It is clear from
Mokose
AJ’s judgment paragraph 20 that the special plea of entrustment
was dismissed. Paragraph 23 of the judgment reflects
that the defence
that Pavoncelli did not act in the course and scope of the practice
of an attorney was dismissed and Paragraph
30 of the judgment clearly
shows that the defence that the monies constituted an investment by
Love was also dismissed. Paragraph
40 of the judgment reflects that
the defence of late notice in terms of section 48(1)(a) was also
dismissed.
[70]
The
Fund delivered an application for leave to appeal on 21 September
2017 but was requested by the Registrar to launch an application
for
condonation which was ultimately refused by Mokose AJ on 14 December
2017. The Fund thereafter applied for leave to Appeal
to the
SCA under case number 025/2018. On 7 March 2018 the SCA granted
limited leave to Appeal to the Full Court of the Gauteng
Local
Division in respect of paragraph 1 of Mokose AJ’s order which
states that Love had complied with section 48(1)(a) of
the Act.
[3]
[71]
On
21 September 2017, the Fund applied for leave to appeal against the
judgment and order of the trial court. On 26 October 2017,
it applied
for condonation for the late filing of its notice of appeal. On 14
December 2017, the trial court dismissed an application
for
condonation on the grounds that the Fund had failed to give a full
explanation for the delay. It accordingly dismissed the
application
for leave to appeal on the ground that it was late and had no
prospect of success.
[72]
On 7
March 2018, on petition to the SCA leave to appeal was granted to the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg sitting
as a full
court on the following limited issues:
‘
3.1.
The refusal by the High Court to condone the late filing of the
application for leave to appeal and the dismissal by the Full
Court
of the appeal on this issue.
3.2 The grant of para
1 of the order of the High Court and the dismissal by the Full Court
of the appeal on this issue.’
I
observe that the other special pleas thus became
res
judicata
as
between the Fund and Love.
[73]
On
25 October 2019, the full court dismissed the appeal with costs.
[4]
Special leave to appeal was granted to the SCA on 5 February 2020
[5]
[74]
The
SCA per Carelse
AJA (Zondi, Molemela
and Nicholls JJA and Mabindla-Boqwana AJA concurring)
upheld
the appeal against the full court’s refusal to condone the late
application for leave to appeal for reasons that are
irrelevant to
the present analysis.
[75]
I
refer to the SCA judgment in some detail given the “mootness”
defence raised by the Fund in its objection to the condonation
for
the late filing of Love’s heads of argument and the contrary
view it took of Love’s conduct, to which I am bound
in as much
as the mootness and the need to apply section 48(2) may be affected.
[76]
With
regard to Loves’ compliance with section 48(1)(a) of the Act
the SCA first analysed the section as follows:
“
[14]
Section 48(1)(a) of the old Act provides:
‘
Claims
against fund: notice, proof and extension of periods of claims
.
(1) No person shall
have a claim against the fund in respect of any theft contemplated in
section 26 unless–
(a) written notice of
such claim is given to the council of the society concerned and to
the board of control within 3 months after
the claimant became aware
of the theft or by the exercise of reasonable care should have become
aware of the theft . . ..’
(My emphasis.)
[15]
The meaning of ‘become aware’ and ‘reasonable care’
in the context of s 48(1)(a) of
the old Act was considered in
SVV Construction (Pty) Ltd v Attorneys, Notaries and Conveyancers
Fidelity Fund
[6]
where
King J held:
‘
To
become aware of something involves a change of condition - the
entering into a new state of condition, here awareness, from a
former
state or condition, here ignorance (compare Ex Parte H J Ivens &
Co Ltd; Ex parte National Engineering Ltd
1945 WLD 105
at 110), and
the state or condition of being “aware” is to have
cognizance of or to know (The Oxford English Dictionary(OED))
- thus
to “become aware” is to acquire knowledge of something
not previously known
[7]
. . .
What
constitutes “knowledge” in this context? In the first
instance it is personal knowledge
[8]
. . .
I
accordingly hold that becoming aware in the section imports the
actual, personal knowledge of the claimant.
[9]
.
. .
What then is this
“knowledge”?
It is not confined to
“that mental state of awareness produced by personal
participation in the theft or by information derived
from the actual
thieves, but includes also a conviction or belief engendered by the
“attendant circumstances” (per
Watermeyer CJ in R v Patz
1946 AD 845.
. . “(o)n the other hand mere suspicion not
amounting to conviction or belief is not knowledge”).
What
is then required is the awareness of material facts which would
create in the mind of a reasonable man the knowledge, in the
sense of
the belief or conviction, not merely the suspicion, that a theft had
been committed.
[10]
. . .
The
type of theft with which this case is concerned is that which
has come to be known as misappropriation of trust funds
(as to which
see Law Society, Cape v Koch 1985(4) SA 379 (C) at 382); it seems to
me that the material ingredients of a theft of
this nature are the
wrongful (in the sense of mens rea) dealing by an attorney with or
appropriating to his own use of the moneys
which have been
“entrusted” to him - in the sense of having been required
by the person making over the funds to
be placed by the attorney
in his trust account and that these remain there until the happening
of some known future event.’
[11]
(My
emphasis.)”
[77]
In
dealing with the Fund’s special plea the court noted that Love
did not replicate thereto. It further stated that:
“
At
the trial it was Mr Love’s case that the claim was not time
barred because it was only on 13 September 2013 when he saw
the
business bank accounts of Turnbull and Associates, that he had proof
of the theft of the R10 million. On 7 October 2013 Mr
Love notified
the Fund of his claim.
[18] The
trial court found that before September 2013 Mr Love ‘had a
suspicion that a theft had occurred and could
not prove it until such
time as he had had access to the bank statements. In Probest Projects
(Pty) limited v The Attorneys, Notaries
and Conveyancers Fidelity
Guarantee Fund
[2015] ZASCA 192
our courts took the view that to have
a suspicion of theft is insufficient’.
[19] The
trial court went on to find that:
‘
The
evidence that the plaintiff only became aware of the facts after he
had received the business bank statements stands uncontradicted.
It
is clear that the monies were stolen not when the money was
transferred from the trust account, but when the money was placed
into the business account. The plaintiff could not have known this
without the benefit of the information.
In
view of the uncontradicted information of the plaintiff, I am of the
opinion that this special plea is dismissed.’
[20] What
the trial court and the full court failed to deal with were the
background facts giving rise to Mr Love only
notifying the Fund on
7 October 2013 of his claim. What the facts show is set out
hereunder.
[21] In
the early part of 2011 Mr Love met Mr Pavoncelli. They discussed an
investment by Mr Love in a company known
as Sword Fern Trading (Pty)
Ltd (Sword Fern). In April 2011 in anticipation of an agreement
being reached, Mr Love paid the
R10 million into Turnbull and
Associates’ trust account. According to Mr Love this
amount was only to be released after
a written agreement for the
purchase of shares in Sword Fern was signed by all concerned. In
anticipation of an agreement, Mr Love
lent Sword Fern over R4
million. Sometime in June 2011 Mr Love and Mr Pavoncelli fell out and
all negotiations for the purchase
of shares in Sword Fern came to an
end. Mr Love then demanded the repayment of his R4 million loan and
the R10 million held in
trust. Neither demand was met. On a date that
does not appear from the record, Mr Love ascertains that Turnbull and
Associates
no longer had the R10 million in its trust account.
[22] On 31
October 2011 Mr Love brought an application to wind-up Sword Fern
based on its failure to repay the loan
amounting to over R4 million.
He also brought an action against Turnbull and Associates claiming
payment of the R10 million. His
main claim is based on an allegation
that the R10 million was paid out in breach of his tacit agreement
with Turnbull and Associates.
In an alternative claim, reliance is
placed on a duty of care which was breached by Turnbull and
Associates when it ‘intentionally
alternatively paid out the
R10 million to one Lorenzo Pavoncelli and or his nominee’.
[23] In
the winding-up application Sword Fern failed to timeously file its
answering affidavit. Mr Love opposed its
condonation application. In
his affidavit dated 23 February 2012 in relation to the R10 million,
he said ‘I do not know when
the amount of money was transferred
and Pavoncelli as well as Turnbull and Associates have refused to
disclose when the amount
of money was paid to Pavoncelli . . . I have
a strong suspicion that it occurred in April 2011’.
[24] On 15
May 2012 and to avoid Sword Fern’s liquidation Mr Pavoncelli
signed an undertaking in which he
undertook to pay Mr Love the debt
owed by Sword Fern and the R10 million that Mr Love had paid
into Turnbull and Associates’
trust account. He also
undertook to pay the attorney client costs incurred by Mr Love in his
action to recover the R10 million
from Turnbull and Associates.
[25] Mr
Pavoncelli failed to make payments in terms of the undertaking. This
had two results. First, on 12 June 2012
Sword Fern was wound-up.
Secondly, Mr Love issued a provisional sentence summons against Mr
Pavoncelli based on the undertaking
to pay the R10 million. In his
answering affidavit dated 28 November 2012 Mr Love inter alia said
that:
‘
2.5
. . . I have only subsequently established that the defendant . . .
had signing powers on the account and in fact utilised the
R10 000
000.00 which was paid into the said trust account. During our
negotiations I made it clear that I had had enough of
the defendant’s
shenanigans and that I insisted on payment and an admission of
liability in respect of all amounts owing
to me failing which my
instructions were to proceed with the liquidation application.
. . .
15.1 . . . However,
the defendant undertook to make payment of the R10 000 000,00.
The reason why he has undertaken to make
payment of this amount, is
because he has personally misappropriated the R10 000 000,00 as
will appear from I set out hereunder.
15.2 . . . I further
refer the Court to the various transfers into the account of
Turnbull, and respectfully submit that it is clearly
demonstrated
that the amount paid into the attorney’s trust account,
being administered by the defendant, was improperly
used by the
defendant. In any event, the defendant undertook to make payment of
the said amount and there is no reason why he should
not be held to
his undertaking.
. . .
25 . . . The truth of
the matter is, as far as I could ascertain and after having obtained
the bank statement of the trust account
is that the defendant
unlawfully utilised the monies in the trust account on his own
version. That is probably the reason why he
undertook to make payment
of the R10 000 000.’ (My emphasis.)
[26] In an
affidavit deposed to by Mr Love on 19 February 2013 in his action
against Turnbull and Associates he said
that on 22 November 2012 he
met Mr Trapido, the only attorney in the firm of Turnbull and
Associates, and he had given him
copies of the trust account bank
statements. These showed the dates on which the R10 million was paid
out of the trust account.
[27] Mr
Love obtained judgment against Turnbull and Associates and in the
provisional sentence action against Mr Pavoncelli
writs of execution
were issued. In both instances nulla bona returns were issued.
[28] On 13
September 2013 Mr Love saw a copy of Turnbull and Associates’
business account which he said showed
the disbursement of money from
the business account. This, he asserts, was when he first knew that
Mr Pavoncelli had stolen the
R10 million. On 7 October 2013 some
three weeks thereafter, he notified the Fund of his claim.
[29]
Having notified the Fund of his claim, he gave evidence on 24 July
2014 at an enquiry arranged by the Fund. In
response to a question by
the Fund’s representative he said that on 15 May 2012, the date
on which Mr Pavoncelli undertook
to pay the R10 million as well as Mr
Love’s attorney and client costs in the action against Turnbull
and Associates, it was
quite clear to him that the R10 million was
not in the trust account.
[30] At
the Fund’s enquiry when asked to explain what the Fund
suggested was a two-year delay in making a claim
against the Fund, he
said that he relied on legal advice and that although he had
suspicions that the R10 million had been stolen,
it was only on
receipt of Turnbull and Associates’ business bank statements
that he had evidence of the theft. This was the
tenor of his evidence
at the trial. As appears hereafter this is a flawed explanation.
[31]
Mr
Love’s version is that the R10 million had to remain in the
trust account until signature of the agreement for the purchase
of
shares in Sword Fern. By June 2011 negotiations had broken down.
No written agreement was ever signed. A demand to repay
the R10
million was ignored.
[32] On
31 October 2011, Mr Love sued Turnbull and Associates for the R10
million. It is clear from the particulars
of claim that he knew that
the R10 million was no longer in trust. In his alternative claim he
alleged that the R10 million had
been paid to Mr Pavoncelli. There is
no evidence why these allegations were made at this point in time. On
15 May 2012
Mr Pavoncelli undertook to pay the R10 million
to Mr Love. The only reasonable inference to be drawn from this
undertaking is that
Mr Pavoncelli had misappropriated the R10 million
from the trust account. At his meeting with the Fund, Mr Love said
that when
he got the undertaking it was clear that the R10 million
was not in the trust account. On 22 November 2012 Mr Love
was
given copies of the trust account which confirmed that the R10
million had been paid out of the trust account in 2011. On 28
November
2012 and in the affidavit Mr Love signed in the provisional
sentence proceedings he said that Mr Pavoncelli gave him the
undertaking
to pay the R10 million ‘because he has personally
misappropriated the R10 million as will appear from what is said
hereunder’.
At the trial Mr Love said that he gave no mandate
to release the R10 million from the trust account, yet the money had
been withdrawn
in 2011. He also admitted that the R10 million was
withdrawn from the trust account within a space of two months. This
he knew
from the trust account bank statements.
[33]
There was no need for Mr Love to wait until September 2013 when he
got the copies of the bank statements of Turnbull
and Associates’
business account before notifying the Fund of his claim. How the
Trust money was spent is irrelevant to his
claim. From what is set
out above it is apparent that Mr Love knew in October 2011 or at
the latest 28 November 2012 that
there had been a wrongful dealing or
appropriation by Turnbull and Associates, alternatively Mr
Pavoncelli, of the money entrusted
to them in the sense of them
having been required by Mr Love to keep the money in the trust
account until the happening of some
known future event.
[12]
This
event did not occur.
[34]
For the above reasons I find that the Fund’s special plea on
the issue of non-compliance with the old Act
should have been upheld
by the trial court. In the result the trial court and the full court
erred in refusing to grant condonation
for the late filing of the
application for leave to appeal and dismissing the special plea.”
(emphases
supplied)
[78]
The
aforesaid reasoning and judgment on which same is based was delivered
on 14 April 2021 by the SCA.
[79]
Hence
the present emphasis on section 48(2)) and the PAJA review
application,
[80]
The Fund answered this
application in this matter by way of an affidavit of one Jerome
Losper (“Losper”), who is the
claims executive of the
Fund, and a non-practising attorney. He sets out the reasons for the
rejection of the claim for the loss
of R10 million as follows:
80.1
that Love’s
statement that he did not know about the theft of the funds until he
obtained the business accounts of Turnbull
& Associates
Incorporated, during or about September 2013, is untrue. He relies,
as already stated in the affidavit of 28 October
2012 filed in
case number 37352/2012, on 29 November 2012, where Love states
that:
“
a. Pavoncelli
had signing powers on the trust account of Turri bull;
b. Pavoncelli had
personally misappropriated the R10 million which is now claimed from
the Fund;
c. Applicant had paid
amounts of R4 million and R2 million into the trust account on 2
April 2012 and a further amount of R4 million
into the said trust
account on 4 April 2012;
d Pavoncelli had
transferred monies out of that into the business account of Turnbull,
beginning on 4 April 2012 in an amount of
R500 000.00 and had
again transferred monies out of the said trust account into the said
business account on 11 April 2012
in amounts of R1 million, R26
081.32, R19 000.00 and R5 490.00, and had again on 12 April 2012
similarly transferred amounts of
R300 000.00, R23 600.00,
R13 313.00 and finally on 16 April 2012 in two amounts of
R6 200.00 and R350 000.00,
respectively.
7.2
Although
the amounts mentioned above do not amount to R10 million, Applicant
boldly states in paragraph 15.1 of the sworn statement
in question
that Pavoncelli had personally appropriated R10 million.
7.3
Moreover,
Applicant attached to his aforesaid affidavit copies of the bank
statements of Michael Trapido Trust which he knew clearly
to be the
same account as the Turnbull trust account - account number 1[...]
held with Nedbank, dated 21 November 2012 for the
period from 1 March
2011 to 31 October 2011. A perusal of those bank statements shows
that the first deposit of R4 million on 2
April 2011, not 2 April
2012 and that the dates of all the other deposits referred to in the
affidavit were in 2011, not 2012.
Moreover, it is clear that prior to
the first deposit by Love in the amount of R4 million, the balance in
the Turnbull trust account
was R55 162-14 and that after the last
deposit of R4 million on 4 April 2011, the balance was R10 060 322-30
and that the deposits
made into that trust account by parties other
than Love for the period between 2 April 2011 and 4 April 2011 were
negligible. Furthermore
it is evident that although no further
noteworthy deposits were made to the account, the entire R10 million
deposited by Love had
been stripped out of the account by the end of
July 2011 and that large amounts had been transferred periodically to
he business
account of Turnbull & Associates Incorporated in the
period between 4 April 2011 and 28 July 2011.There was clearly an
objective
basis for Love's stated conviction that Pavoncelli had
misappropriated the R10 million that he had deposited.
7.4 Applicant also
stated explicitly that Pavoncelli made the offer of 15 May 2012 to
him (Love) because Pavoncelli had misappropriated
the R10 million.
7.5 it is clear then
that Applicant already knew by no later than 28 November 2012, and
probably as early as 15 May 2012, that his
monies had been stolen by
Pavoncelli.
7.6 Applicant's claim
was therefore submitted well outside of the three months of him
having acquired actual knowledge of the theft
as is prescribed in
section 48(1)(a) of the Attorneys Act, No 53 of 1979.”
80.2
Losper also states that
Love nowhere states that Pavoncelli was an attorney or that he
believed that Pavoncelli was an attorney.
According to him:
“
What the
Applicant does state is that Pavoncelli offered to sell him shares in
Swordfern Trading (Pty) Ltd and instructed him to
make payment for
the shares into the trust account of Turnbull Although Applicant
alleges that Pavoncelli was apparently allowed
to operate an
attorney's practice under the guise of Turnbull, that cannot suffice
to establish that the theft must have been committed
in the course
and scope of the practice of an attorney, which is a requirement
implicit in section 26 of the Act if the Fund is
to be liable for the
loss of money.
11. However, even if
it be held that the money was paid over into the trust account of
Turnbull in the course and scope of the practice
of an attorney who
is not identified or specified, there was no entrustment of monies
for the purposes of the Act. The payment
into Turnbull's trust
account was made in discharge of Applicant's obligations in terms of
an agreement with Pavoncelli, who was
acting on behalf of the seller
of shares in the company Sword Fern Trading (Pty) Ltd and, in his
capacity as the agent of
that seller, contracted with
Applicant, to sell the shares to him for the agreed price of R10
million. In terms of the agreement
between Pavoncelli, acting as the
agent of the seller of the shares, and Applicant, the purchaser, the
full amount of the purchase
price was to be paid into the trust
account of Turnbull. By paying the amount of R10 million into the
said trust account, Applicant
was not entrusting money to an
attorney, but was instead simply paying for shares that he had
bought. The fact that a written agreement
of sale was still to be
finalised is of no consequence. Applicant clearly did not pay money
over into the trust account of Turnbull
with an instruction that
Turnbull is to hold over the money until a written agreement of sale
had been concluded in respect of
the shares or until instructed by
Applicant to pay the money over to Pavoncelli. He paid the money over
because Pavoncelli asked
him to do so to pay for the shares that he
was purchasing.
80.3
Finally, Losper contends
that the liability of the Fund is excluded by section 47(1)(g) of the
Act which provides that the fund
shall not be liable for the loss
suffered by a person as the result of theft of money which a
practitioner has been instructed
to invest on behalf of such person.
[81]
In addition, Losper states
that Love was informed that the reasons given may not be exhaustive
and, over and above the non-compliance
with section 48(1)(a) of the
Act, that the Fund’s rights are fully reserved, in the event of
it later appearing that additional
grounds for rejection of the claim
may exist. He then sets out further grounds for the rejection
of the claim on the assumption
that, had Love given timeous
notification thereof, which grounds Losper states have become
apparent from Love’s founding
affidavit, and they are briefly
set out as follows:
81.1
Pavoncelli is not and has
never been an admitted attorney, that Love doesn’t believe that
Pavoncelli was an attorney or believed
that he was an attorney;
81.2
Love alleges that
Pavoncelli was apparently allowed to operate an attorney’s
practice under the guise of Turnbull and that
that cannot suffice to
establish that the theft must have been committed in the course and
scope of the practice of an attorney,
which is a requirement implicit
in section 26(8) of the Act in order to establish liability against
the Fund;
81.3
Even if it be held that
the money was paid over into the trust account of Turnbull in the
course and scope of the practice of an
attorney, who was not
identified or specified, Losper contends there was no “entrustment
of monies for the purposes of the
Act”.
81.4
He alleges that the
payment into Turnbull’s trust account was made in discharge of
Love’s obligations in terms of an
agreement with Pavoncelli.
81.5
It is contended that, by
paying an amount of R10 million into the trust account, Love was not
entrusting money to an attorney but
was ostensibly paying for shares
that he had bought. Losper submits that the fact that the
written agreement of sale was
still to be finalised is of no
consequence. Love did not pay the money into the trust account of
Turnbull with an instruction that
Turnbull was to hold over the money
until a written agreement of sale had been concluded in respect of
the shares or until instructed
by Love to pay the money over to
Pavoncelli. He paid the money over because Pavoncelli asked him to do
so to pay for the shares
that he was purchasing.
81.6
Even on the assumption
that the money was paid into the trust account of Turnbull in the
course and scope of practice of an unknown
attorney and even if there
was an entrustment to an unknown and unspecified practitioner, Losper
submits that the liability of
the Fund is excluded by section
47(1)(g) of the Act, which provides that the Fund shall not be liable
for the loss suffered by
a person as the result of theft of money
which a practitioner has been strictly instructed to invest on behalf
of such person.
81.7
Consequently, Losper
suggests that the monies were either a payment for
81.8
certain shares or on the
understanding that Pavoncelli was to invest the money in shares in
Sword Fern Trading on Love’s behalf.
81.9
Even if the Fund had not
rejected the claim for want of compliance under the provisions of
section 48(1)(a) of the Act, it would
have several other grounds for
not allowing the plaintiff’s claim.
[82]
I do not comment on
Losper’s contentions regarding the unconstitutionality of
section 48(1)(a) given the conclusions I have
arrived at below. As to
the balance of the Fund’s answering Affidavit, he admits that
the Fund’s decision constitutes
administrative action and that
the provisions of PAJA are applicable. He denies, however, that the
Fund’s decision is susceptible
to review under sections 6(2)
(e)(ii), (iii), (v) and (vi or 6(2)(f)(ii) and that (cc) of PAJA are
applicable.
[83]
I heard the matter on 7
August 2023, and, during argument, Mr Marcus made the following
submissions: At the core of the matter lies
access to justice
inasmuch as it entails a limitation period within which claims
against the Fund must be instituted. Although
the Act has been
repealed by the
Legal Practice Act, due
to the fact that this matter
arose prior to the
Legal Practice Act, it
must be decided in terms of
the Act. He submitted that the limitation and access to justice flows
from section 48 of the Act, which
stipulated a period within which a
notice of claim must be given. If not given timeously, section 48(2)
of the Act permits the
Fund to extend the time period.
[84]
At the heart of this
matter remains the issue of an application to and the failure by the
Fund to extend the time period This is
so due to the decision which
was arrived at in the SCA matter of referred to above.
[85]
In the SCA matter, it
upheld the appeal by the Fund and set aside a previous order made by
the High Court to the effect that the
claim should be admitted and
finding that condonation for the late filing of the notice of appeal
is granted and the special appeal
is upheld with costs.
[86]
Mr Marcus submits that
Love filed his heads of argument late and has applied for condonation
for such late filing and that only
the Fund, and not the Minister,
opposes condonation. The core basis of the opposition by the Fund is
that the late application
lacks prospects of success. Given that any
application for condonation, as already stated in the SCA matter, is
inextricably linked
to the Fund’s prospects of success, he
submitted that it should be dealt with at the outset.
[87]
He further submitted the
following:
87.1
The limitation on access
to justice flows from section 48 of the Attorneys Act which
stipulates a period within which notice of
a claim must be given.
Where notice is not given timeously, section 48(2) of the Attorneys
Act permits the Fund, having regard
to all circumstances, to extend
the time period.
87.2
This case concerns an
application to, and the failure by, the Fund to extend the time
period.
87.3
On 31 July 2014 Love’s
attorney requested the Fund to extend the period of notice period and
although not so stated it could
only have intended that the Fund do
so under section 48(2) of the Act.
87.4
The letter contained the
following grounds in support of the extension request:
87.4.1
In the action proceedings
against Turnbull, the claim for R 10 million was based on breach of
contract not theft.
87.4.2
In its plea, Turnbull
states that the money was released to Centrosphere, pursuant to an
oral instruction by Mr Love.
87.4.3
Mr Love had sought to
recover the money from Mr Pavoncelli, following his breach of an
undertaking to pay the money.
87.4.4
Whilst Mr Love knew that
the money had been transferred from Turnbull's trust account to its
business account, he learned that it
was transferred out of the
business account only in September 2013.
87.4.5
It was only in September
2013, a month before filing the notice, that Mr Love subjectively
believed that the money had been stolen.
87.4.6
On 4 September 2014, the
Board rejected Mr Love’s claim.
87.4.7
Despite having been
expressly asked to extend the time periods applicable to the filing
of the claim, the rejection letter makes
no reference to section
48(2) of the Act. It states only that the claim is rejected
"on
the grounds that the requirement of Section 48(1)(a) have not been
met"
.
87.4.8
It is clear that the Board
never considered the request in terms of section 48(2). It simply
rejected the claim because it concluded
that section 48(1)(a) had not
been complied with but did not exercise its discretion in terms of
section 48(2).
87.5
It is contended tat the
Fund’s failure to extend the time period was unlawful, for two
reasons:
87.5.1
First, the Fund failed to
consider Mr Love's request for an extension. It therefore failed to
exercise its discretion in terms of
section 48(2) at all.
87.5.2
Second, if it had
exercised its discretion, the Fund would have been legally bound to
extend the period that is prescribed by section
48(1)(a) of the Act.
The Fund's failure to
exercise its section 48(2) discretion.
[88]
Mr
Love expressly asked the Fund to extend the time periods set out in
section 48(1) of the Act and provided substantive reasons
in support
of his request. I should at this stage already point out that the
Fund contends that no application in terms of section
48(2) was ever
made.
[13]
This is simply
wrong. Even more so in view of the admission made by Losper in
respect of paragraph 21 of the Applicants Founding
Affidavit in
paragraph 37 of the Fund’s Answering Affidavit.
[89]
For three reasons, it is
clear that the Fund never considered Mr Love's request for an
extension in terms of section 48(2). First:
89.1
The letter of rejection of
claim makes no reference to the request for an extension;
89.2
The letter from the Fund,
dated 4 September 2014, rejecting the claim, simply says:
"Further to
previous correspondence herein, l wish to advise that the Fund's
Board of Control has resolved that this claim
be rejected, on the
grounds that the requirements of Section 48(1)(a) have not been met.”
89.3
The letter makes no
reference to the request for an extension whatsoever, and does not
purport to provide any reasons for a refusal
to grant such extension.
It does not mention section 48(2) at all.
89.4
It is therefore clear that
the Fund failed to consider Mr Love's request for an extension in
terms of section 48(2) but rejected
the claim on the basis of
non-compliance with the time periods contained in section 48(1)(a).
[90]
Second - the Fund's
reasons make no reference to the request for an extension.
90.1
On 20 January 2015, Mr
Love asked the Fund for reasons for its rejection of his claim.
90.2
On 18 February 2015, the
Fund provided those reasons.
90.3
The Fund’s reasons
explain in some detail the Board's conclusion that section 48(1)(a)
was not satisfied. But they make no
refence whatsoever to the power
to extend in section 48(2).
90.4
Nor do they contain any
reason which could possibly justify a refusal of the request for an
extension.
90.5
It is accordingly clear
from the reasons given for its decision by the Board that the Board
did not consider or decide Mr Love's
request for an extension in
terms of section 48(2) of the Act.
[91]
Third, the Board has
since, in an affidavit deposed to under oath in the parallel
proceedings, confirmed that it never exercised
its discretion in
terms of section 48(2) of the Act.
91.1
Mr Love sought leave to
appeal to the Constitutional Court against the SCA's decision in the
action.
91.2
The Fund’s Claims
Executive, who is also the deponent to the answering affidavit in
these proceedings, Mr Jerome Losper, deposed
to the answering
affidavit before the Constitutional Court.
91.3
In that affidavit, Mr
Losper says the following:
"(Mr
Love has never sought, and the (Board) was never required, and,
accordingly, has never refused, to extend the three-month
period in
terms of section 48(2) of the Attorneys Act".
[14]
91.4
This makes it
unequivocally clear that the Board never considered Mr Love's request
for an extension of time periods in terms of
section 48(2) of the
Act.
91.5
Mr Losper’s
statement is incorrect when he said under oath that Mr Love did not
ask for an extension. From the above it is
clear he did. The Fund
either did not consider the request or considered it and disregarded
it.
[92]
It is thus clear that the
Fund failed to exercise the discretion conferred on it by section
48(2).
[93]
The Constitutional Court
and the SCA have held that a failure to exercise a statutorily
conferred discretion when asked to do so
is unlawful.
[94]
In
Ombud
for Financial Services v CS Brokers
[15]
,
an ombud refused a request to allow oral and written evidence in a
dispute before it. The applicable statute conferred on the
ombud a
discretion as to the appropriate procedure to be adopted. The ombud
failed to exercise that discretion and applied a predetermined
policy
without reference to the facts before it.
[95]
The SCA held that this was
unlawful:
“
[16] During
argument, counsel for the Ombud readily conceded that the application
required a specific ruling along with reasons.
The reason given for
not holding a hearing with oral evidence is simply that the Ombud
does not do so. The response is one which
clearly indicates that no
discretion at all was exercised on the application. Instead, a
predetermined policy was applied, without
reference to the specific
issues in the matter before her. This when the Ombud is invested with
a wide range of procedural options
which can be tailored to different
situations and complaints. This does not constitute an improper
exercise of her discretion but
an approach which, as the Board put it
in the appeal determination, ‘
disregards
her statutory obligation to exercise her discretion’
.
With
this statement, I can find no fault.
(emphasis
supplied)
[17] In
argument, the Ombud referred to the final determination to attempt to
demonstrate that reasons were given. What is
said in the
determination is:
‘
Storm’s
attorneys criticize this office for not holding hearings to resolve
“material factual disputes”. This
office does not have a
policy that prohibits the holding of hearings. Where it is
appropriate, a hearing will be held. In this
case there are no
material disputes of fact that require such a hearing.’
This
clearly contradicts the refusal at the time on the basis that ‘this
Office does not hold hearings’. It is the latter
statement by
which the Ombud responded to the application. In any event, the
reasons given in the determination do not address
the factual
disputes noted by the Ombud herself which go to the heart of the
claim of Mr Wallace. It suffices to say that
it is difficult to
discern which factors weighed and occupied her mind when she gave her
decision. To say that there were no material
disputes of fact when
the parties disagreed whether Mr Wallace had already decided to
invest in Sharemax when he met with Mr Storm
simply beggars belief.
[18] It
is therefore unnecessary to address the manner in which the
discretion of the Ombud should be exercised and the test
for
interference with it on review.
If
no discretion is exercised, when the Ombud was indeed vested with a
discretion, that has to be the end of the matter.
As was agreed by the parties before us, the entire appeal turns on
this single issue. It is clear in these circumstances that the
appeal
must fail.
” (
emphasis
supplied)
[96]
Reliance
was also placed on
Saidi
[16]
where the Constitutional
Court held that the failure by a refugee reception officer to
exercise a statutory discretion when asked
to do so was unlawful.
Upon being asked to exercise the power to extend an asylum seeker
permit, she was obliged to use the power,
and could not lawfully
refuse to do so.
[97]
In the circumstances Mr
Marcus submitted that the law is clear: Where a statute confers a
discretion on an administrator, and the
administrator is asked to
exercise the discretion, but fails to do so, its decision is unlawful
and will be reviewed and set aside.
[98]
Hence the Fund’s
failure to exercise its discretion in terms of section 48(2)
accordingly violates:
98.1
section 6(2)(d) of PAJA,
to the extent that its failure to consider Mr Love's request to
extend the notice period was materially
influenced by an error of
law;
98.2
section 6(2)(e)(iii)
and/or (vi) of PAJA, in that the Board failed to consider the reasons
for extending, properly or at all;
98.3
section 6(2)(f)(i) of
PAJA, as it breaches the obligation in section 48(2) of the Act to
extend when notices are filed as soon as
practicable; and/or
98.4
section 6(2)(i) of PAJA,
as it is otherwise unconstitutional and unlawful.
The
Fund was required to extend the time periods
.
[99]
If it had decided Mr
Love's request for an extension, the Fund would have been required to
grant the request. Section 48(2) of the
Act empowers the Board to
extend the period prescribed by section 48(1)(a) of the Act:
"If
the board of control is satisfied that,
having regard
to all the circumstances
,
a claim or the proof required by the board has been lodged or
furnished
as soon as practicable,
it may in its
discretion extend any of the periods referred to in subsection
(1)
."(emphases
supplied)”
[100]
The exercise of the
Board's power to extend, which it must exercise after having regard
to all the circumstances:
100.1
is
administrative action, for it is a public power or public function
exercised in terms of an empowering provision, which adversely
affects the rights of persons, and has a direct, external legal
effect;
[17]
and
100.2
must
be lawful, rational and reasonable, failing which it "would be
subject to normal judicial review by the High Court".
[18]
[101]
In
Northern
Province Development
the court per Moseneke J held that:
“
[40]
Lastly, Mr Delport referred me to the provisions of s 48(2)
of the Act and these read as follows:
'(2)
If a board of control is satisfied that, having regard to all the
circumstances, a claim or the proof required by the board
has been
lodged or furnished as soon as practicable, it may in its discretion
extend any of the periods referred to in ss
(1).'
Clearly
the board of control has a dispensatory power to be found in ss (2).
In its discretion, the board of control may condone any late
filing of a claim or extend any relevant time limits prescribed by ss
(1). What is more, there is no time limit within which such power may
be exercised. It is clear from ss (2) that such extension
is in the
discretion of the board of control. The board is obliged, however, to
have regard to all the circumstances and may call
for such proof as
it may consider necessary. Such proof must be furnished as soon as
practicable.
[41]
No case law has been placed before me in support of the proposition
that the exercise by the board of control of the statutory
power to
be found in ss (2) is subject to judicial review.
In
my view, there is no doubt that when the board of control exercises
the statutory function conferred on it by s 48(2), such conduct
would
be subject to normal judicial review by the High Court. In such
review proceedings the Court may direct that the board of
control
takes such steps as may be fair and just, regard being had to
all the circumstances related to the dispensation which
the affected
applicant seeks. It therefore seems to me that it is entirely
unnecessary at this stage and for purposes of this case
to grant an
order of condonation as sought by Mr Dunn. Nor is it necessary
or appropriate to direct that leave be given to
the applicant to
bring such an application for condonation. The right to so
proceed can be inferred from s 48(2) of the Act.
There appears to be
no limit on
when
an application for an extension of time for complying with s 48 may
be filed with the board of control.
There is consequently no merit in any of the arguments advanced, nor
is it appropriate to grant the condonation order sought
by the
plaintiff. It follows that constitutional issues raised cannot find
application in this case.
”
(emphases supplied)
[102]
It was thus submitted that
for the reasons that follow, that if the Fund had considered Mr
Love's request for an extension, it was
duty bound to exercise its
discretion in his favour.
The
facts underpinning the request for an extension.
[103]
It is clear on the facts
that Mr Love's claim was submitted as soon as practicable. He could
only submit his claim once he
subjectively
believed that the funds had been stolen, which occurred on 2
September 2013.
[104]
The facts on which the
Board relied when deciding to reject Mr Love's claim are as follows:
104.1
On
28 November 2012, Mr Love deposed to an affidavit in which he said
that Mr Pavoncelli personally misappropriated the R 10 million.
[19]
104.2
Mr
Love attached to this affidavit bank statements which showed that the
money had been transferred from Turnbull's trust account
to its
business account.
[20]
104.3
On
15 May 2012, Mr Pavoncelli offered to pay to Mr Love the R 10 million
that had been misappropriated.
[21]
[105]
Whilst these facts are not
disputed, they do not demonstrate that it would have been practicable
for Mr Love to lodge his claim
before 2 September 2013.
[106]
Before
2 September 2013, which is the date upon which Mr Love was provided
the business statements, he did not know that his funds
had been
transferred out of Turnbull's business accounts, and therefore that
they had been stolen in the common law sense of the
term.
[22]
[107]
Mr Marcus submitted that
to see this it is essential to contextualise the facts relied on by
the Fund, for doing so demonstrates
that Mr Love acted as soon as
practicable:
107.1
First
, the context of the
28 November 2012 statement that Pavoncelli had misappropriated the R
10 million is as follows:
107.1.1
In
October 2011, Mr Love issued a summons against Turnbull, in which he
claimed that Turnbull breached their agreement in terms
of which it
would not pay Centrosphere for the Sword Fern shares until Love had
instructed it to do so.
[23]
107.1.2
In
its plea, Turnbull stated that the R 10 million had been paid to
Centrosphere.
[24]
107.1.3
In
an affidavit by Mr Pavoncelli, dated 25 January 2012, he stated that
the R 10 million had been "
paid
out to Centrosphere
"
[25]
107.1.4
In
an affidavit, dated 26 October 2012, Mr Pavoncelli again stated that
the money was paid to Centrosphere.
[26]
He also said that "
for
all intents and purposes, [Mr Love] regards Turnbull as simply my
alter ego
",
but that Mr Love had to claim the R 10 million directly from
Turnbull.
[27]
107.1.5
It
was in response to the admissions by Pavoncelli, that he in his
capacity as Turnbull's alter ego, breached the agreement not
to pay
the money to Centrosphere for the Sword Fern shares until Love had
instructed it to do so, that Love stated, Pavoncelli
had personally
misappropriated the money.
[28]
107.2
Second
, regarding Love's
access to Turnbull's business account bank statements, its relevant
context includes the following:
107.2.1
Whilst
Love knew that his money had been transferred from Turnbull's trust
account to its business account, he did not know the
fate of the
money after that transfer.
[29]
107.2.2
It
was only after Love received copies of Turnbull's business account
statements that he learned that the money was in fact not
paid to
Centrosphere.
[30]
107.2.3
As
noted, Pavoncelli had said that "
the
R 10 million paid to the trust account
"
has been "
paid
out to Centrosphere
".
[31]
107.2.4
The
Fund argues that Love could not have believed that the money had been
used for this purpose, as Mr Keith Mountjoy, of Sword
Fern, had
offered at a meeting to repay the money from the account of Sword
Fern.
[32]
107.2.5
It is not explained why
this belief was unreasonable.
107.2.6
The meeting with Mr
Mountjoy concerned repayment of the R 4.3 million loan. At the
meeting, Mr Mountjoy said that he would make
sure Love's money would
be repaid. He did not indicate how, nor did Love to enquire any
further.
107.2.7
Love
only wanted his money back.
[33]
107.3
Third
, regarding the offer
made by Mr Pavoncelli to Love, the context in which it was made is as
follows:
107.3.1
The offer to pay the R 4.3
million loan and the R 10 million paid on trust to Turnbull, was made
by Pavoncelli in the context of
two sets of legal proceedings:
liquidation and action.
107.3.2
Love's application to have
Sword Fern liquidated, for its failure to repay the R 4.3 million
loan:
(a)
Pavoncelli was a director
of Sword Fern.
(b)
The
offer was made by Pavoncelli "
in
a final bid to obtain a further postponement of the liquidation
application
".
[34]
(c)
From Love's perspective,
the undertaking was an effort by Pavoncelli to save his company from
liquidation.
(d)
Indeed, when Sword Fern
was finally wound up, Pavoncelli was personally ordered to pay costs.
107.3.3
Mr Love's action against
Turnbull, for its failure to repay Mr Love his R 10 million:
(a)
As noted, from Love's perspective, Turnbull was the "alter ego"
of Pavoncelli.
[35]
(b) Thus, whether payment
came from Pavoncelli or Turnbull was of little interest to Love.
107.3.4
Given
Pavoncelli's position in Sword Fern and Turnbull, it was, from Love's
perspective, reasonable for Pavoncelli to make the offer
in his
personal capacity.
[36]
107.3.5
Pavoncelli
says in his 26 October 2012 affidavit, his motive for the offer was
to settle the litigation with Love, as "
our
relationship has soured substantially
".
[37]
107.3.6
That Pavoncelli made the
offer to repay the loan amount and trust amount, therefore, was not
an admission by him that he had stolen
these amounts.
[108]
It was thus submitted that
the evidence demonstrates the following:
108.1
Love held a bona fide but
mistaken belief about the legal character of Turnbull's and/or
Pavoncelli's dealing with his money.
108.2
He did not think that his
money had been stolen. He thought only that it had been transferred
out of the trust account and into
the business account against his
instructions.
108.3
Until he saw the business
bank account statements, he never knew that the money had been
transferred out of the business account
with the intention of
permanently depriving him thereof.
108.4
Until that time, Love had
no grounds to believe that his money had been stolen.
[109]
Holding this bona fide but
mistaken belief, Love made every conceivable effort to recover his
money from those to whom he had entrusted
it:
109.1
He initially tried to
recover the money from Turnbull.
109.2
He secured an undertaking
from Mr Pavoncelli.
109.3
He met with Mr Mountjoy of
Sword Fern, who assured him that the money would be returned.
109.4
All the while, he was
informed under oath by Pavoncelli, that whilst his money was not in
Turnbull's trust account, this was because
it had been paid out to
Centrosphere.
109.5
And when he learnt of the
true fate of the money, he immediately gave notice in terms of
section 48(1)(a) of the Act.
[110]
It would not have been
practicable for Love to submit a claim until the date on which he
learned, subjectively, that the funds had
been stolen, which occurred
on 2 September 2013.
[111]
Objectively
speaking,
therefore, it is clear that the claim was submitted as soon as
practicable.
The
duty to extend.
[112]
Because it was objectively
established in Love's 31 July 2014 letter that he lodged his claim as
soon as was practicable, the Board
was required to extend the periods
referred to in section 48(1)(a).
112.1
Whilst
section 48(2) uses the word "may", as noted by Wade and
Forsyth, cited approvingly by the Constitutional Court
[38]
"may" often signifies the existence of a power coupled with
a duty:
“
The
hallmark of discretionary power is permissive language using words
such as 'may' or 'it shall be lawful', as opposed to obligatory
language such as 'shall'. But this simple distinction is not always a
sure guide, for
there
have been many decisions in which permissive language has been
construed as obligatory
.
This is not so much because one form of words is interpreted to mean
its opposite, as
because
the power conferred is, in the circumstances prescribed by the Act,
coupled with a duty to exercise it in a proper case.
"
[39]
(emphases added)
112.2
As
explained by Sachs J sometimes “
may
"
just signifies that there is "
an
authorisation to exercise a power coupled with a duty to use it if
the requisite circumstances [are] present
."
[40]
[113]
It was thus submitted that
the aforesaid approach to section 48(2) of the Act is the one that
best gives effect to the purpose of
the Act:
113.1
The Fund is a statutory
body performing a public function, whose primary purpose is to
reimburse people who suffer loss as a result
of the theft of money
entrusted to an attorney.
113.2
A
primary purpose of the Fund is to reimburse people who suffer loss
due to the theft of trust monies.
[41]
The Fund thus has a duty in its capacity as
custos
morum
to protect the public.
[42]
113.3
This purpose must inform
the interpretation of the requirement to act "
as
soon as practicable
".
An interpretation of this requirement, in other words, that furthers
the purpose of section 26 of the Act, must, where the
language allows
for it, be adopted.
113.4
Faced with a claim by a
member of the public, the Board's exercise of its discretionary power
must be informed by constitutional
values.
113.5
The
Constitutional Court has held that a "
decision
by the State whether or not to invoke prescription in a particular
case must be informed by the values of our Constitution.
"
[43]
Just as the state has an
obligation to facilitate not frustrate social security, the Fund has
an obligation to facilitate not frustrate
bona
fide
claims that are made by innocent members of the public.
[114]
Thus, once the Fund is
satisfied that, on objectively reasonable grounds, a claimant acted
as soon as practicable, it must exercise
its power to extend the
notice period.
[115]
Its failure to do so in
this case renders its decision unlawful and reviewable for the
reasons already listed above and now repeated:
115.1
section 6(2)(d) of PAJA,
to the extent that its failure to consider Love's request to extend
the notice period was materially influenced
by an error of law;
115.2
section 6(2)(e)(iii)
and/or (vi) of PAJA, in that the Fund failed to consider the reasons
for extending, properly or at all;
115.3
section 6(2)(f)(i) of
PAJA, as it breaches the obligation in section 48(2) of the Act to
extend when notices are filed as soon as
practicable; and/or
115.4
section 6(2)(i) of PAJA,
as it is otherwise unconstitutional and unlawful.
[116]
Having stated its case for
the extension of the period in terms of section 48(2) of the Act Mr
Marcus addressed the
ex
post facto
reasons.
The
ex post facto
reasons.
[117]
The Fund, in its answering
affidavit, but not in the original reasons provided for rejecting the
claim, nor in the reasons given
after Mr Love's request for reasons,
cites three additional grounds for rejecting the claim as set out
above in Losper’s
affidavit.
[118]
The Board, however, is
bound by the reasons given for the decision at the time. Its
ex
post facto
attempt to
supplement and modify the reasons for the decision is not
permissible.
[119]
The SCA as confirmed by
the Constitutional Court has held that:
“
The
duty to give reasons for an administrative decision is a central
element of the constitutional duty to act fairly. And the failure
to
give reasons, which includes proper or adequate reasons, should
ordinarily render the disputed decision reviewable. In England,
the
courts have said that such a decision would ordinarily be void and
cannot be validated by different reasons given afterwards
—even
if they show that the original decision may have been justified.
For
in truth the later reasons are not the true reasons for the decision
but rather an ex post facto rationalisation of a bad decision.
"
[44]
[120]
In any event, the Board's
ex post facto rationalisation does not bear scrutiny. It now offers
three additional reasons for rejecting
the claim:
120.1
First,
Pavoncelli is not an attorney, and Love does not establish that the
theft of the R10 million was committed in the course
and scope of the
practice of an attorney.
[45]
120.2
Second,
Love's R10 million was not entrusted to Turnbull, but rather was paid
to Turnbull in discharge of Love's obligations under
a sale of shares
agreement.
[46]
120.3
Third,
and alternatively,
[47]
the
money was paid to Turnbull for investment purposes, and so is
excluded by section 47(1)(g) of the Act.
[48]
120.4
These
ex
post facto
reasons
formed the basis of the Fund's special pleas in the action. The High
Court dismissed each of those special pleas and refused
leave to
appeal. As a result, it is not open to the Board to advance those
reasons in these proceedings, as they have been determined
and the
issues, they raise are
res
judicata
between the
Fund and Mr Love.
120.5
Having read the SCA
judgment pertaining to the section 48(1)(a) claim in this action and
the fact that leave to appeal was only
granted on one of the special
pleas and having read the judgments annexed to the application for
condonation I am satisfied that
these
ex
post facto
reasons are
res judicata
between the parties by virtue of the initial High Court Decision
delivered by Mokose AJ.
[121]
In view of the
conclusions, I arrived at it is unnecessary to deal with the
constitutional challenge against section 48(1)(a) of
the Act.
Extending the notice
period
[122]
For the reasons provided,
Mr Marcus submitted that the Fund’s failure to extend the
period in section 48(1)(a) of the
Act was unlawful and irrational.
[123]
Whenever
an administrative action breaches PAJA, a court must declare it to be
unlawful. This is required by section 172(1)(a) of
the Constitution,
read with section 8 of PAJA providing content to the remedy that
follows.
[49]
[124]
Under section 8(1) of
PAJA, after a declaration of invalidity, this Court may grant any
order that is just and equitable.
[125]
It was submitted that it
would be just and equitable in the circumstances for this Court to
make the following order:
125.1
Review and set aside the
failure to extend as unlawful and irrational; and
125.2
extend the notice period
for Love's filing of his claim for R10 million to 7 October 2013.
[126]
To the extent that the
extension of the notice period would constitute substitution of the
Fund’s power to extend, it is submitted
that this is warranted
by the principles articulated by the Constitutional Court in
Trencon
:
126.1
In considering whether to
order substitution, a court must start by asking itself whether:
126.1.1
it is in as good a
position as the administrator to decide; and
126.1.2
the administrator's
decision is a foregone conclusion.
126.2
After this, it must
consider other factors, like delay, bias or incompetence of the
administrator.
126.3
Ultimately,
substitution must be just and equitable.
[50]
[127]
It was submitted that:
127.1
Having all the facts
before it, this Court is in just as good a position as the Board to
decide whether, objectively speaking, Love
acted as soon as
practicable;
127.2
In the light of the
undisputed facts, the outcome of the Board's decision whether to
extend the period is a foregone conclusion.
It is inconceivable that
section 48(2) of the Act, properly applied, could lead to an outcome
other than extension.
127.3
Lastly, it would not be
just and equitable to require Mr Love, after so many years of having
his rightful claim frustrated, to endure
further delays at the hands
of the officials of the Board.
[128]
For that reason, it is
submitted that the relief sought in paragraph 3 of the notice of
motion ought to be granted.
CONDONATION
[129]
Under this rubric Mr
Marcus sets out the progress of the proceedings i.e. notice of motion
being issued on 3 March 2015 with the
Fund’s answering
affidavit on 8 April 2015 and Love’s replying affidavit filed
on 8 May 2015. Thereafter Love instituted
action seeking payment of
the R10 million against the Fund whereafter the Fund raised the
special plea i.e. non-compliance with
section 48(1)(a) of the Act.
Hence the Application was held in abeyance pending conclusion of the
action,
[130]
He also relies on the fact
that after multiple judgments and appeals the Constitutional Court
held that this application must be
determined by this Court before
the Constitutional Court will consider Love’s appeal against
the SCA decision. The Constitutional
Court dismissed the application
for leave to appeal “
as
it is not in the interests of justice to hear it at this stage”.
[131]
From this it is submitted
it is clear that the Constitutional Court was not prepared to
hear Mr Love's appeal at the time
because it regards the issues
raised in the main application to be significant, and because those
issues must be determined by
this Court before the appeal against the
SCA's decision in relation to the action can properly be heard.
[132]
Hence the submission that
this application had to be reactivated and the substantive
application for condonation for the late filing
of Love’s heads
of argument. This application was filed on 12 April 2022 and the Fund
filed its answering affidavit on 28
April 2022. The replying
affidavit was due on 13 May 2022, but Love’s attorney tested
positive on 7 May 2022 and had to be
isolated in terms of the
prevailing protocols.
Despite the fact that the
replying affidavit in the condonation application was drafted it
could not be commissioned until 16 May
2022, the next court day after
his isolation period expired. Thereafter it was served on 17 May
2022.
[133]
On instruction of Mr
MacGregor, the deponent to the founding affidavit for condonation, Mr
Hamilton was instructed to convey the
following to the Fund’s
legal representatives:
133.1
that Mr Macgregor had
contracted Covid-19 and had been isolated; and
133.2
that he would not be able
to depose to the affidavit by 13 May 2022; and
133.3
Consent was sought to
allow for the late filing of the replying affidavit.
[134]
This email is attached to
the replying affidavit as “RA3”.
[135]
At 12h45 on 13 May 2022 Mr
Hamilton on instructions from Mr Macgregor directed another email to
the Fund’s legal representatives
recording that multiple
telephonic attempts had been made to discuss the request for consent
for the late filing of the Replying
Affidavit and that consent was
once more sought for the late filing of same. A copy of this email is
attached as “RA4”.
At 17h16 on the same day a further
email was directed to the Fund’s legal representatives
recording that the Fund failed
to answer telephone calls and failed
to respond to emails. In addition, an unsigned copy of the replying
affidavit was enclosed
with same.
[136]
In emails respectively
dated 16 and 17 May 2022 the Fund’s attorneys declined to grant
consent for the late filing of the
replying affidavit.
[137]
Mr MacGregor submits in
his condonation application that it is in the interests of justice
that the court condones the late filing
of the replying affidavit in
the application for condonation for the following reasons:
137.1
The delay will not cause
the Fund prejudice;
137.2
The condonation
application and the replying affidavit are being filed expeditiously
following his release from isolation;
137.3
The court will not be
prejudiced by the late filing of the replying affidavit;
137.4
The replying affidavit is
necessary to address the irrelevancies raised by the Fund in its
answering affidavit as well as the Fund’s
misconstrual of the
relief that is sought in the main application.
[138]
No formal objection was
filed against the application for the late filing of the replying
affidavit and same is thus condoned to
the extent necessary, given Mr
Macgregor’s illness.
[139]
In substance the
application for condonation for the late filing of Love’s heads
of argument is based on the fact that the
main application was held
in abeyance pending the determination of the action. The primary
reason for the institution of the action
was that Love was of the
view that he had lodged his claim against the Fund timeously and
having regard to other disputes of fact
which could only be resolved
on trial, which if resolved in his favour would finalise the matter.
In addition, section 49(2) of
the Act required him to institute
action within 12 months of the Fund rejecting his claim. The Fund had
raised a special plea to
the effect that he did not comply with
section 48(1)(a) of the Act and was time-barred.
[140]
In the pre-trial Love
suggested a consolidation of the main application and the review
action. No agreement was reached until the
trial date when the Fund
agreed not to proceed with the lis
alibi
pendens
defence in the
trial and for same to be decided only on the four special pleas
raised by the Fund. The parties agreed that if the
defences failed
that would determine the matter in favour of Love. I observe that
“the matter” in the context can only
mean the trial issue
in respect of section 48(1)(a) of the Act.
[141]
An application was then
made for the separation of the four special pleas (in the action). As
a result, Love then suspended his
prosecution of the main application
given that if he succeeded on section 48(1)(a) of the Act no further
relief would be required
on the main application. The Fund also did
not pursue the main application further and did not proceed with the
plea of
lis alibi
pendens.
[142]
In
my view the pre-trial was the time and place to agree that the trial
court hear both the main application and the action so as
to cover
all outstanding issues. I am of the view that it is incompetent to
consolidate a trial with an application they could
have been heard
together. Since the latter procedure was not followed it remained a
given that there will remain the section 48(2)
remnant should Love
not have a final decision in his favour under section 48(1)(a) of the
Act. By instituting the action and focusing
on section 48(1)(a) Love
was most certainly not abandoning the relief sought under section
48(2) or the declaration of
unconstitutionality
.
The notion that by instituting the action he made an election is also
of no help. Before any of the aforesaid conclusions can
be arrived at
his conduct has to be tantamount to a waiver of those remedies. I do
not believe that a waiver of the remaining remedies
took place by
instituting an action based on section 48(1)(a) of the Act.
[51]
[143]
After the tortuous route
already discussed and the observation by the Constitutional Court the
remnant under section 48(2) and the
alternative that section 48(1)(a)
is unconstitutional could only be prosecuted now. In short then the
aforesaid are the fundamental
reasons why the heads of argument in
respect of the remnant remained in abeyance.
[144]
The SCA only upheld the
special plea pertaining to the Fund’s defence under section
48(1)(a) on 14 April 2021 and same gave
rise to Love’s
application for leave to appeal to the Constitutional Court on 6 May
2021. The Fund answered same on 18 May
2021 and on 20 May 2021 Love
filed a replying affidavit with an application for leave to file
same. Copies of these affidavits
are annexed to the founding
affidavit for the condonation application as Annexures “FA1”,”
FA2” and “FA3”
respectively.
[145]
On 8 December 2021, the
Constitutional Court issued directives (Annexure “A4”) to
the effect that the parties should
file affidavits as to the status
of the main application and Mr Love’s intended course of action
in respect of the main application.
Mr Love and the Fund filed their
respective affidavits on 14 and 17 December 2021.
[146]
On 11 February 2022, the
Constitutional Court dismissed the Application for Leave to Appeal
“
as it is not in
the interests of justice to hear it at this stage
”.
[147]
The inference Love seeks
to draw from the aforesaid is that the Constitutional Court regards
the issues raised in the main application
as significant and that
same must be determined before the Appeal against the SCA decision
can be heard. Hence the need to obtain
a judgment on the need to
extend the notice period alternatively the constitutionality of that
period.
[148]
The main application was
ripe for hearing save for the filing of heads of argument and hence
the application for condonation for
the late filing of same.
[149]
The Fund focused its
counterattack in its heads of argument on the condonation application
for the late filing of the applicant’s
heads of argument dated
12 April 2022. It quite correctly pointed out in its heads of
argument that prayers 1 and 2 of the Notice
of Motion in the main
application has been abandoned given that same is at present
res
judicata
due the SCA
decision. This leaves the prayer for extension of the time period and
the alternative regarding the constitutionality
of section 48 (1)(a)
open to further challenge by the Fund. It sought to do so under three
rubrics “Patent lack of Merit
in the Main Application”,
“Mootness of Main application” and “Applicant has
made its bed”.
[150]
The “mootness”
argument allegedly arises from the findings made in the SCA case to
the effect that the applicant’s
claim against the Fund has been
dismissed on the basis of all the facts adduced in evidence before
the trial court and after the
bringing of the main application
applicant elected to abandon the application and institute an action
based on the same cause of
action in which neither the
constitutionality nor the provision of section 48(2) were raised and
in respect of which no evidence,
or submissions, were tendered in
relation to either of these aspects, which could easily have been
done, and, having made that
election Applicant must be held to have
made his bed and must now lie on it.
[151]
After rehashing the facts
and tortuous history of the matter the Fund emphasised that Applicant
stated, in paragraph 12 of his Affidavit
filed in compliance with the
directives of the Constitutional Court, that he accepted that it
would not be in the interests of
justice for that Honourable Court to
determine his appeal against the SCA judgment "at this stage"
and that he intended
proceeding with his unheard application before
this Honourable Court.
[152]
That being so, the Fund
then contended that what Love was asking of the Honourable
Constitutional Court was unprecedented, namely,
to hold his
application for leave to appeal a judgment and order of the SCA in
abeyance until such time as this Honourable Court
has determined this
application under Case No. 7793/2015. The Constitutional Court
accordingly refused Applicant's application
for leave to appeal the
judgment and order of the SCA. A copy of that judgment is annexed to
Applicant's affidavit in support of
his application for condonation.
[153]
I should add that prior to
the dismissal of the application for leave to appeal the outcome of
the SCA decision, Love sought
leave to file a replying
affidavit in response to the Fund’s affidavit in the
Constitutional Court to demonstrate that it
raised section 48(2) of
the Act in the main application and that the Fund effectively
rejected same. The paragraph in the Fund’s
affidavit before the
Constitutional Court that triggered the exceptional request for leave
to file such affidavit arose from the
following paragraph in the
Fund’s affidavit:
“
16.However,
since Applicant has never sought, and Respondent was never required,
and, accordingly, has never refused, to extend
the three month period
in terms of section 48(2) of the Attorneys Act — which it may
also only do, if Applicant can show
that the notice of the claim
given “as soon as was practicable", and Applicant has not
ever, in any proceedings regarding
its claim, alleged that to hav
e
been the case —
that
review application is clearly misconceived.”
[154]
Ultimately the
Constitutional Court responded to the effect that it has considered
the application for leave to appeal. It concluded
that the
application for leave to appeal should be dismissed as it is not in
the interests of justice to hear it at this stage.
The Court has not
awarded costs and ultimately formulated the order as follows: “Leave
to appeal is refused”.
[155]
How any of the aforesaid
demonstrates mootness of the remaining relief sought in the main
application is beyond me. As far as I
am concerned no court has as
yet pronounced any view pertaining to section 48(2) of the Act or on
the constitutionality of section
48(1)(a). I will in due course refer
to Mr Marcus’ submissions on the topic.
[156]
I readily accept that the
Fund is entitled to challenge the application for late filing of the
Applicant’s heads of argument
on the basis that the remaining
remnants of the main application has no prospects of success. In
support hereof it repeats its
claim that there was no section 48(2)
application ever placed before the Fund and it pertinently challenges
the notion that the
letter already referred to constituted such a
request.
[157]
It contends that in the
said letter applicant did not in fact request an extension of the
time period, but simply stated as a fact,
albeit unsubstantiated,
that there was no good reason not to extend the date and,
accordingly, the Fund (although the heads of
argument refers to “the
Applicant” I assume it is a typographical error) was not
required to exercise its discretion
in terms of section 48(2). I have
already stated above that in my view the letter intended to refer to
section 48(2) of the Act.
Of more import is the submission that
applicant's contentions do not anywhere deal with what the position
is where the jurisdictional
grounds stated in the statute for the
exercise of that discretion simply do not exist and there is no
lawful basis for the exercise
of the discretion in question.
[158]
It is submitted that the
provisions of sections 48(1)(a) and 48(2) of the Act must also be
understood in the context of the provisions
made by the Legislature
for claims against the Fund. Such claims do not arise in contract,
delict or unjustified enrichment, but
are created in the very
statutory regime of which sections 48(1)(a) and 48(2) are part. The
Legislature has created a claim in
statute and the statute must
stipulate when and how the claim arises and the conditions that have
to be met to establish a valid
claim.
[159]
Nevertheless
the Fund contends that the time-bar effected by section 48(1)(a) is
not "a prescription provision proper"
as contemplated in
the unanimous judgment of the Constitutional Court in
Competition
Commission of South Africa v Pickfords Removals SA (Pty) Ltd
', but rather a "procedural time- bar" as contemplated in
that judgment.
[52]
[160]
A prescription provision
proper would place an absolute prohibition on the submission of
claims outside the period stipulated in
section 48(1)(a), as indeed
Love contends is the Fund’s interpretation of that section.
[161]
A
mere procedural time-bar can be condoned.
[53]
Ordinarily
condonation is not a mere formality and good cause has to be shown
before it is justified.
[54]
[162]
ln the instant case, the
Legislature has made express and specific provision for condonation
in section 48(2) of the Act, and the
inquiry regarding whether or not
the non-compliance with the procedural time-bar may be condoned, must
begin with the terms of
section 48(2) of the Act which provides as
follows:
"If the
Board
is satisfied that
,
having regard to all the circumstances,
a claim
... has been lodged ... as soon as practicable,
it may in its
discretion extend ... the… [period] referred to in subsection
1”
[163]
It
is thus submitted that the statute requires that, before the Fund may
extend the period stipulated in section 48(1)(a), it has
to be
satisfied that the claim has been lodged as soon as practicable.
[55]
[164]
The Oxford South African
Concise Dictionary, Second Edition, defines "practicable"
as "
1. able to be
done or put into practice successfully. 2. useful."
Hence the Fund submits that “practicable” in section
48(2) means: "able to be done or put into practice successfully"
or capable of being accomplished; feasible".
[165]
The Funds thus submits
that what had to be apparent from the aforementioned letter of
Applicant's attorneys is that it was not practicable
to lodge the
notice of claim within the prescribed period of 3 months from the
date of Applicant having become aware of the theft.
[166]
It also submits that:
166.1
there was nothing in the
documents submitted to the Fund or in the oral evidence given by Love
in the Rule 8bis enquiry conducted
by Respondent, which would have
justified a finding that the claim had been submitted as soon as had
been practicable;
166.2
Love's position throughout
has been that the claim had been submitted within the required
3-month period, in which case no extension
of time was required to be
contemplated;
166.3
Love also did not set out
any basis that would remotely have justified a finding that the claim
was submitted as soon as practicable,
as was required by section
48(2).
[167]
It is further submitted
that it must be abundantly clear that the Fund is required to
exercise the discretion afforded it in terms
of section 48(2) in a
judicious manner and, in the absence of the jurisdictional fact(s)
required for the exercise of that discretion,
any decision by the
Fund to extend the time period stipulated in section 48(1)(a) in this
case would have been tantamount to an
arbitrary exercise of its
discretion and therefore unlawful and, in any event in violation of
the express provision by the Legislature
for the extension of the
period concerned.
[168]
In addition, what Love now
seeks is an order that the Fund be compelled to exercise its
discretion in terms of section 48(2) in
his favour when there is,
objectively, no basis at all for doing so.
[169]
It is also submitted that
the findings of the SCA confirm that there was, and is, no basis for
Love to contend that the Fund could
have found that his claim was
lodged as soon as practicable even though it was lodged outside of
the time period stipulated in
section 48(1)(a).
[170]
Put somewhat differently,
as I understand the reasoning, Love knew earlier and did not lodge
his claims within the prescribed period
under section 48(1)(a) as
confirmed by the SCA and hence he cannot expect the Fund to extend
the period given the absence of the
jurisdictional requirements for
section 48(2).
[171]
The problem with the
aforesaid argument is that it totally decontextualizes the background
and surrounding circumstances as skilfully
set out by Mr Marcus and
with which I dealt in paragraphs 103 – 111 above. The context
within which Love for instance uses
the word “misappropriate”
is of the utmost importance. On the assumption that the SCA finding
is correct in that Love
did not comply with section 48(1)(a)
non
constat
that there is
no room for the application of section 48(2). If anything in my view
and as demonstrated in paragraphs 103 to 111
above there is ample
room to invoke section 48(2) and to extend the time period in section
48(1)(a). Love is a layman and despite
his suspicions he in my view
had to tread lightly before making unsubstantiated and reckless
allegations against an attorney. Given
the wide powers the Fund enjoy
as set out in
Northern
Province Development
the
Fund had ample grounds to extend the section 48(1)(a) period till 7
October 2013.
[172]
The
Fund’s foolhardy denial that there was no section 48(2)
application before it at any stage coupled with its present
persistence
in the submission that
there
was nothing in the documents submitted to it, or in the oral evidence
given by Applicant in a Rule 8bis enquiry conducted
by it, which
would have justified a finding that the claim had been submitted as
soon as had been practicable is indicative of
a mindset aimed at
dismissing Love’s claim at any cost. The affidavit filed by
Losper in the proceedings before the Constitutional
Court to the
effect that Love never relied on section 48(2) of the Act and which
gave rise to the need for Love to seek leave to
file a replying
affidavit is also supportive of the aforesaid mindset.
[173]
Mr Marcus also submitted
in respect of the condonation of the late filing of the heads of
argument that the interests of justice
compel condonation also for
the following reasons:
173.1
The cause of delay is
entirely due to the need to suspend the main application owing to the
overlap in facts and legal issues between
the application and the
action;
173.2
The delay will not cause
the Fund or the Minister any prejudice;
173.3
The affidavits in the main
application has been filed, the Fund has been actively and
continuously involved, by way of the action,
the essence of the
issues which are the subject of the (remaining relief) in the
application since Love suspended his prosecution
of same in 2015
(pending the conclusion of the action) and the only interest of the
Minister is purely legal in nature;
173.4
The Fund also required
condonation for the late filing of its application for leave to
appeal to the SCA;
173.5
This condonation
application and the outstanding heads of argument are being filed
expeditiously following the Constitutional Court’s
dismissal of
Love’s application for leave to appeal against the SCA order;
173.6
The court will not be
prejudiced by Love’s delay in filing the heads of argument;
173.7
For all the reasons
captured in the affidavits and his heads of argument Love has strong
prospects of success;
173.8
The relief sought is of
general public significance as it concerns the constitutionality of a
statutory time-bar in social legislation,
the purpose of which is to
protect the public.
[174]
To the extent that the
Fund attempts to justify its refusal as to why the application to
extend was refused it advances an extensive
argument that, even if it
had exercised its discretion, it would have refused same. Mr Marcus
countered same with the argument
this is untenable for four reasons:
174.1
It is not permissible to
resort to
ex post facto
reasoning;
174.2
The section vests the
power in the Fund, but it is common cause that the Fund has never
exercised that power;
174.3
The
argument amounts to the impermissible reliance on the "no
difference" principle — that even though the Fund
failed
to exercise its statutory discretion, this would make no difference
to the outcome rejecting the request.
[56]
174.4
Our
courts have repeatedly recognised that the path of the law is strewn
with open and shut cases which somehow were not.
[57]
174.5
This argument was not
foreshadowed in the papers.
[175]
Whereas in the present
case, the decision is taken for no reason it is arbitrary and
unconstitutional. See
Minister
of Justice and Another v SA Restructuring and Insolvency
Practitioners’ Association and Others
2018 (5) SA 349
(CC), at paragraphs 49 to 54. The Fund’s
suggestion that to have extended the time period would have been
arbitrary is in
my view devoid of any substance.
[176]
It was also submitted on
behalf of Love that it is well-established that, where a statute
confers a power, the failure to exercise
that power when called upon
to do so is unlawful. This follows from three guiding principles:
176.1
the failure to exercise a
discretion is a reviewable irregularity and, since the Fund denies
wrongly that it was called upon to
exercise any discretion, it does
not take issue with this principle;
176.2
ex
post facto
reasoning is impermissible.
[58]
The Fund did not address this principle at all, even if it were
permissible for the Fund to resort to
ex
post facto
reasoning, the reasons it advances do not bear scrutiny.
176.3
section
48(2) creates a power coupled with a duty. Although section 48(2)
uses the word “may”, this does not connote
a choice not
to extend if the facts justify such an extension.
[59]
[177]
As
stated above the Fund seeks to bypass all of this by contending that
the present application is moot by virtue of the SCA decision
involving Love. Mr Marcus’ counter to the above is that
the Fund mischaracterises the issue as one of mootness. He contends
that a “
case
is moot and therefore not justiciable if it no longer presents an
existing or live controversy
”.
[60]
[178]
Mr Marcus further submits
that the Fund is mistaken in contending that the SCA judgment
“
finally
determined Mr Love’s claim for compensation for the Fidelity
Fund on the same cause of action that he relies on herein
.”
[179]
The
sole issue before the SCA was comprised of section 48(1)(a) of the
Attorneys Act due to the fact that in the High Court the
Fund had
raised a special plea and Love had not complied with section 48(1)(a)
of the Act.
[61]
He
further submits that the High Court dismissed the special plea and
granted judgment in Love’s favour and that the
appeal to the
Full Court by the Fund failed but the SCA granted special leave to
appeal. Hence, he submits, the SCA judgment
deals exclusively
with compliance with section 48(1)(a). This arises from the basis
that the Fund filed the special plea and therefore
the judgment sets
out:
179.1
the requirements for
compliance with section 48(1)(a);
179.2
the terms of the special
plea;
179.3
the Trial Court’s
finding on the special plea;
179.4
the factual errors in the
Trial Court and Full Court’s finding on the special plea;
179.5
the conclusion that the
special plea should have been upheld.
[180]
The mootness argument must
thus fail. It does not constitute a basis to refuse condonation. In
reality there are two remaining live
issues in the application before
me:
180.1
the failure by the Fund to
consider the extension application; and
180.2
the constitutional
challenge to section 48(1)(a).
[181]
Relief in either case will
have a practicable effect inasmuch as it will permit Love to pursue
his claim for the loss of money entrusted
to his attorney.
[182]
It is clear from the facts
before me that the Fund never considered that the application under
section 48(2) for extension. It also
clearly never intended to do so
as is clear from the above notwithstanding the fact that as a matter
of law it was obliged to do
so. Nothing in the SCA judgment, as far
as I am concerned, precludes such an application for extension to be
heard by me and, hence,
I am of the view that, given that the Fund
did not extend the application or respond thereto, this Court is
entitled to order the
Fund to do so.
[183]
Given all the
circumstances and the context already referred to within which Love
was acting, coupled with legal advice, Mr Marcus
is, in my view,
quite correct that I am entitled to review the Fund’s failure
to make such a decision.
183.1
The only just and
equitable remedy at this stage would be to extend the notice period
for filing Love’s claim to 7 October
2013;
183.2
Although
section 48(2) requires the Fund to be satisfied, this requires an
objective standard.
[62]
183.3
The Fund contends,
contrary to the evidence, that it has never been called upon to
exercise its powers in terms of section 48(2);
183.4
The
Fund cannot bring an impartial mind to bear on the matter, but has
already decided against Love, come what may;
[63]
183.5
Finally, there is
absolutely no evidence at all to contradict the facts put up by Love.
[184]
The aforesaid brings this
matter within the purview of the
Trencon
-case in that:
184.1
I am in as good a position
as the Fund to make the decision;
184.2
The Fund's position is
that it has already decided the question of extension.
[185]
In view of the aforesaid
conclusions there is no need to pronounce on the constitutionality of
section 48(1)(a) since same is not
an absolute time-bar interfering
with Love’s rights under section 34 of the Constitution. I have
considered the heads of
argument of the Minister but given the
conclusions arrived at no need exists to deal with the submissions
made therein.
[186]
It follows that
condonation for the late filing of Love’s heads of argument
should be granted.
8
In the premises, I make
the following order:
1.
The period within which
the Applicant had to lodge its claim with the Fund is herewith
extended until 7 October 2013;
2.
The late filing of the
Applicant’s heads of argument is hereby condoned.
3.
The First Respondent is
ordered to pay the Applicant’s costs including the costs of 2
counsel where employed;
4.
No order of costs is made
in respect of the Second Respondent’s costs.
S, VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN
AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
Date application heard:
7 August 2023
Date judgment
reserved:
7 August 2023
Date judgment delivered:
18
January 2024
Representation for
applicant
Counsel:
Gilbert Marcus SC
Nick Ferreira
Instructed by:
Malherbe Rigg &
Ranwell Inc
650
Trichardt Road
Beyerspark,
Boksburg
P O
Box 26873, East Rand 1462
Docex
4, Boksburg
Tel:
011 918 4116
Email:
brian@mrr.co.za
c/o
Jordaan & Wolberg Attorneys
86
Hamlin Street
Waverley,
Johannesburg
P O
Box 46041, Orange Grove 2119
DX
80, Johannesburg
Tel:
011 485 1900
Fax:
086 685 8460
Email:
matt@jwlaw.co.za
Ref:
Mr Smith/AD/
Representation for
first respondent
Counsel:
Adv G Oliver
Instructed by:
Brendan Müller
Inc
1
Eghan Road
Wynberg
Tel:
021 762 5700/ 086 655 8617
Email:
brendan@bmullerinc.co.za
Ref:
Mr B Muller
c/o
Madhlopa Attorneys Inc
50(A)
Seventh Avenue
Jan
Smuts Street Avenue
Parktown
North
Johannesburg
Representation for
second respondent
Counsel:
P. Nkutha
Attorney:
The State Attorney
Second Respondent’s
Attorneys
10
th
Floor
North Building
95 Market Street
Cnr
Kruis Street
Tel:
011 330 7702
Email:
JohVanSchalkwyk@justicegov.za
Ref:
2134/15/P45/KP
Representation for
third respondent
No appearance for the Law
Society of the Northern Provinces, Pretoria
The
Law Society of the Northern Provinces, Pretoria
Third Respondent
Procforum Building
123 Paul Kruger
Pretoria
[1]
See
paragraph 23 of the Fund’s Answering Affidavit in the
Condonation Application,
[2]
See
paragraph 31 of the Funds Answering Affidavit in the Condonation
Application,
[3]
See
Annexures “JLSCA2” read with “JLSCA5” to the
Fund’s answering affidavit in the condonation application.
[4]
See
Annexure “JLSCA 7” to the Fund’s answering
affidavit in the condonation application.
[5]
See
Annexure “JLSCA8” to the Fund’s answering
affidavit in the condonation application.
[6]
SVV
v Construction (Pty) Ltd v Attorneys, Notaries and Conveyancers
Fidelity Guarantee Fund
1993
(2) SA 577
(C) at 584I-585A.
[7]
SVV
supra at 584J
[8]
SVV
fn
6 at 585B.
[9]
SVV
fan 6 at 585D.
[10]
SVV
fn 6 at 585D-F.
[11]
SVV
fn 6 at 586B-C.
[12]
See
SVV
fn
6 at 586B-C.
[13]
See
para 69 of the Funds Heads of Argument
[14]
Para
16 of the answering affidavit in the Constitutional Court, Annexure
“
FA2
"
to the CA
## [15](781/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 117 (17 September 2021)
[15]
(781/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 117 (17 September 2021)
[16]
Saidi
and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
2018 (4) SA 333
(CC) paras 16, 18 and 43
[17]
Section
1(a)(ii) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 2000
("PAJA").
[18]
Northern
Province Development Corporation v Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board of
Control
2003 (2) SA 284
(T) ("
Northern
Province Development
”)
para 41, per Moseneke J.
[19]
AA
paras 7.1.b (pp. 460-461), 33.2.b (p. 471) and 43 (p. 475).
[20]
AA
paras 7.3 (p. 462), 33.4 (pp. 472-473) and 38.1 (p. 474).
[21]
AA
para 7.4 (p.462).
[22]
Under
the common law theft requires an intention to deprive the owner
permanently of their property (R v Sibiya
1955 (4) SA 247
(A) 257C).
[23]
RA
para 7.15 (p. 494), read with annexure RA1 to RL1 to the FA (pp.
55-66).
[24]
Annexure
RA4 to RL4 to the FA, plea para 2.1.5 (p. 72).
[25]
RA
para 7.14 (pp. 493-494), read with para 5.25 of the affidavit
attached as annexure "J" to annexure RL10 to the FA
(p.
410). See also RA para 11 (p. 497).
[26]
Para
8.6 to annexure RL9 to the FA (pp. 151-152).
[27]
RA
para 7.15 (p. 494), read with para 8.10 of the affidavit attached as
RL9 to the FA (p. 153).
[28]
RA
para 7.18 (p. 495).
[29]
FA
para 25 (pp. 24-25).
[30]
RA
para 7.17 494).
[31]
Para
5 25 of annexure J to RL10 to the FA (p. 410). See also RA paras
35.4 (pp. 513-514) and 39 (p. 515).
[32]
AA
para 38.1 (p. 474).
[33]
RA
para 30.1 (p. 508).
[34]
FA
para 12.2 (pp. 14-15), about which the Board admits no knowledge (AA
para 28.2 (p. 468-469)).
[35]
RA
para 7.15 (p. 494), read with para 8.10 of the affidavit attached as
RL" to the FA (p. 153).
[36]
RA
para 32.3 (pp. 510-511).
[37]
Para
9.6 to annexure RL9 to the FA (p. 159).
[38]
Van
Rooyen and Others v The State and Others (General Council of the Bar
of South Africa Intervening)
2002 (5) SA 246
(CC) [*] para 182 fn 163.
[39]
Wade
and Forsyth in Administrative Law
(8th ed, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2000) 239.
[40]
South
African Police Service v Public Servants Association
2007
(3) SA 521
(CC) para 15.
[41]
Section
26 of the Act.
[42]
Veriave
and Others v President, SA Medical and Dental Council and Others
1985 (2) SA 293
(T); Johannesburg Society of Advocates and Another v
Nthai and Others
2021 (2) SA 343
(SCA) at para 33.
[43]
Njongi
v MEC, Department of Welfare, Eastern Cape
[2008] ZACC 4
;
2008 (4) SA 237
(CC)
("Njongi) para 79.
[44]
National
Lotteries Board and Others v South African Education and Environment
Project
2012 (4) 504 (SCA) at para 27 (emphasis added, footnotes omitted),
confirmed in
National
Energy Regulator of South Africa and Another v PG Group (Pty)
Limited and Others
2020 (1) SA 450
(CC) para 39.
[45]
AA
paras 10 (p. 464), 20 (p. 466), 25 (p. 467), 29 (p. 469)
[46]
AA
paras 11 (p. 464), 27 (p. 468)
[47]
AA
para 14 (p. 464).
[48]
AA paras 12-13 (p. 465).
[49]
Consolidated
Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief Executive Officer,
South African Social Security Agency, and Others
[*)2014
(1) SA 604 (CC) para 25.
[50]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa Ltd
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC) para 47.
[51]
See
Amler’s
Precedents of Pleadings,
9
th
Edition as edited by Harms p 378.
[52]
CCT 123/19 at paras 32 and 33.
[53]
CCT 123/19 at para32(b).
[54]
cf
Competition
Commission of South Africa v Pickfords Removals SA (Pty) Ltd,
supra, at para 54.
[55]
qv Oxford South African Concise Dictionary,
Second Edition (2010)
[56]
See for example:
Van
der Walt v S
2020 (2) SACR 371
(CC);
2020 (11) BCLR 1337
(CC) at paras 28-30;
Psychological
Society of South Africa v Qwelane
2017 (8) BCLR 1039
(CC) ("Qwelane ) at paras 32 to 35;
My
Vote Counts NPC v Speaker of the National Assembly
2016 (1) SA 132
(CC) ("My Vote Counts" ) at para 176;
Minister
of Defence and Military Veterans v Motau
2014 (5) SA 69
(CC) ("Motau") at para 85;
Allpay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Chief Executive Officer
of the South African Social Security Agency and Others
2014(1)
SA 604 (CC) at para 26 and
Lufuno
Mphaphuli & Associates (Pty) Ltd v Andrews and Another
2009
(4) SA 529
(CC) at paras 152 to 154.
[57]
See
John
v Rees
[1969] 2 All ER 274
(Ch) at 402
My
Vote Counts
(supra) at para 176 and
Motau
(supra) at para 85.
[58]
See
Tsogo
Sun Caledon (Pty) Ltd and others v Western Cape Gambling and Racing
Board and Ano
2023 (2) SA 305
(SCA) at para 19;
Umgeni
Water v Sembcorp Siza Water (Pty) Ltd and others
2020 (2) SA 450
(SCA) at para 52;
Zuma
v Democratic Alliance and others
2018 (1) SA 200
(SCA) at para 24.
[59]
See above paragraph 112.1
[60]
See
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and others v Minister of Home
Affairs and others
2000 (2) SA 1
(CC) at para 21 fn 18; Normandien
Farms (Pty] Ltd v South Africa Agency for Promotion of Petroleum
Exploration SOC Ltd
2020 (4) SA 409
(CC)
at para-47.
[61]
See the SCA judgment paragraph 34
[62]
See
Walele
v City of Cape Town and Others
[2008] ZACC 11
;
2008
(6) SA 129
(CC) at para 60.
[63]
See
Trencon
(supra) at para 54;
Minister
of Local Government and Land Tenure v lnkosinathi Property
Developers (Pty) Ltd and Another
1992
(2) SA 234
(TkA) at 239-240 and the cases referred to there.
sino noindex
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