Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 302South Africa
Dayanand-Jugroop v Ngento (2022/23261) [2024] ZAGPJHC 302 (20 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dayanand-Jugroop v Ngento (2022/23261) [2024] ZAGPJHC 302 (20 March 2024)
Dayanand-Jugroop v Ngento (2022/23261) [2024] ZAGPJHC 302 (20 March 2024)
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sino date 20 March 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case No: 2022-23261
REPORTABLE:NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
DATE: 20 March 2024
In
the matter between
USHA
DAYANAND-JUGROOP
Applicant
And
SIYAMCELA
BONGANI
NGENTO
Respondent
JUDGMENT
STRYDOM,
J
[1]
The applicant and the respondent in this
matter are respectively an advocate and an attorney of the High Court
of South Africa.
[2]
The applicant is suing the respondent for
the payment of professional fees allegedly owing to her.
[3]
It is common cause that the respondent
briefed the applicant to appear in several matters and that she
delivered invoices. The applicant’s
case is that in terms of
these invoices the aggregate amount of R 139 000-00 plus interest
remains unpaid.
[4]
The respondent did not file an answering
affidavit but filed a notice on points of law as provided for in Rule
6(5)(d)(iii) of the
Rules if this Court.
[5]
Certain defences were raised as law points,
which upon scrutiny, are not law points but rather factual
allegations and defences
which should have been contained in an
answering affidavit.
[6]
The notice on points of law starts with an
introduction where,
inter alia
,
the following allegations are made:
a) that the Respondent’s
defence is premised on the alleged items, time spent and overreaching
as contained in the four
invoices of Applicant.
b) it is stated that the
Respondent has referred this matter to the Johannesburg Society of
Advocates with jurisdiction over
the applicant and is awaiting the
outcome.
c) that pending the outcome of
the complaint lodged with the Bar Council this matter should not have
been enrolled before
this Court, alternatively, that the hearing of
this application should be stayed.
d) that condonation should be
granted for the late filing of the notice raising the points of
law, to be the following:
i. the
audi alteram partem
rule; the applicant intends to silence the respondent and/or to
attain an order that may result in undue enrichment without a fair
hearing; that the applicant’s invoices are not absolute and/or
agreed between the parties.
ii. A point of jurisdiction was
raised on the basis that the fee dispute was pending before the Bar
Council and that this Court
has no jurisdiction pending the outcome
of the fee dispute before the Bar Council.
iii. A point of jurisdiction was
raised as the claim fell within the jurisdiction of the Magistrates’
Court.
iv. A
lis pendens
plea was
raised and that the applicant served a notice in terms of Rule 41A
dated 30 June 2022 pertaining to mediation.
v. It is alleged that there exist a
dispute of fact and should have proceeded by way of action.
vi. It is stated that the applicant
is bound by the provisions of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
and
to the sections in the Act that deal with the reasonableness of fees.
It was stated that the applicant failed to show her hourly
rate on
her invoices to the respondent.
vii. A punitive cost order was sought
against the applicant.
[7]
When a party failed or elected not to file
an answering affidavit the only evidence before a court is that
contained in a founding
affidavit. Any point of law can only be
decided with reference to the evidence contained in the affidavits
filed by the applicant.
[8]
Evidence cannot be inserted in a notice to
argue law points, consequently, this matter can only be considered on
the factual basis
set by the applicant.
[9]
When the matter was heard the main defence
of the respondent was stated to be the alleged unreasonableness of
the fees charged by
the applicant and how this should be determined.
[10]
If the uncontested evidence as referred to
in the founding affidavit is considered it has been shown that the
respondent failed
to raise the reasonableness of the charges
contained in the applicant’s invoices upon delivery of these
invoices, or shortly
thereafter.
[11]
The Applicant was rather informed in
correspondence that some of the invoices were paid in full or that
the proverbial cheque was
in the post.
[12]
In a detailed letter written by the
respondent particularity was provided about the invoices of the
applicant and the fees charged.
[13]
Specific allegations were made in relation
to payment and the respondent concluded that only R18 000-00 was
outstanding. The respondent
provided no proof of payment as is
expected from a person alleging payment, instead, the respondent
decided to attack the reasonableness
of the fees.
[14]
Only at a much later stage, when these misrepresentations could no
longer delay payment to the applicant, the respondent engaged
in a
new line of defence challenging the reasonableness of the amounts
charged. A complaint of overreaching was laid at the Johannesburg
Bar, the professional body to which the applicant belongs too.
[15]
This raises a question over the
bona
fides
of the respondent in this matter
who previously stated that, except for R18 000, the invoices of
applicant were paid.
[16]
The relationship between the applicant and
the respondent is contractual and is further regulated in terms of
the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
, read with the Code of Conduct for
Legal Practitioners.
Section 18.18
of the Code of Conduct provides
that an attorney must pay timeously in accordance with any
contractual terms the reasonable charges
of an advocate.
[17]
This would mean that the reasonableness of
an advocate’s charges could be challenged but it should be done
timeously and following
the correct procedures. The provisions of the
Code of Conduct has hardened the obligation of an attorney to pay the
fees of an
advocate into a rule of law. (See: Solomon and Another v
Junkeeparsad 2022(3) SA 526 (GJ).
[18]
The applicant avers that an agreement was
reached between her and the respondent that she would provide
professional services at
the rate of R2000-00 per hour. She rendered
the services and charged accordingly. The invoices reflect the hourly
rate and time
spent. There is nothing to counter say this.
[19]
Her first invoice presented to the
respondent was partly paid after delivery, without a challenge based
on the reasonableness of
charges.
[20]
It should be noted that in a supplementary
affidavit filed by the applicant allegations were made that provide a
final blow to the
respondent’s allegations that applicant was
overreaching. It is stated in the affidavit that on 13 December 2022
the Professional
and Fees Committee of the Johannesburg Bar Council
dismissed the complaint of unprofessional conduct with reference to
overcharging
by the applicant.
[21]
After the outcome of the fee dispute the
respondent was placed on terms to file an answering affidavit but
still failed to do this.
[22]
Unsurprisingly, after the dismissal of the
complaint, the respondent placed no further reliance on the
lis
pendens
and other related defences, as
contained in the notice to raise legal points.
[23]
The focus of the defence in relation to the
excessive legal fees now shifted to an argument that the taxing
master should first
tax the applicant’s invoices before payment
becomes due.
[24]
This new defence was not raised as a point
of law in the notice filed by the respondent.
[25]
When an attorney challenges the
reasonableness of fees a complaint should be laid with the
professional body under which professional
rules an advocate
practises. This is what happened in this matter. The reasonableness
of an advocate’s invoice delivered
to an instructing attorney
for payment does not concern the taxing master.
[26]
The respondent’s reliance on the
matter of
Blakes Maphanga Inc v
Outsurance Co. Ltd
2010 (4) SA 232
(SCA), and other matters, for his contention that the applicant’s
fees should be taxed before it can be claimed is misplaced.
In that
matter the question was whether an attorney’s untaxed bill
constituted a liquidated claim which could be set-off
against money
collected by the firm from a creditor of Outsurance. The dispute in
Blakes Maphanga
was
a dispute
regarding fees charged by
the attorney to its client and not between attorney and an advocate.
A client, failing an agreement to
suggest otherwise, can insist on a
taxation of the attorney’s bill of costs. The respondent,
in
casu,
is not a client of applicant.
[27]
In the applicant’s case we are not
dealing with a set-off but with invoices delivered to the respondent.
[28]
In any event, this issue was not properly
raised before this Court and should not further be entertained.
[29]
The jurisdiction point that this claim
should have been instituted in the lower courts is also without
merit. The Constitutional
Court in the matter of
South
African Human Rights v Standard Bank of South Africa and Others
2023 (3) SA 36
(CC) upheld the Supreme Court of
Appeal in its finding that “our courts are not entitled to
decline to hear cases properly
brought before them in exercise of
their jurisdiction”.
[30]
With reference to respondent’s
argument that there exist a dispute of fact concerning the
reasonableness of the fees charged,
as previously stated, there can
never be a dispute of fact in this matter as the respondent failed to
file an answering affidavit.
Furthermore, the respondent’s
reply to the applicant’s letter of demand constituted an
admission of liability without
a challenge to the reasonableness of
fees.
[31]
In my view, the applicant has made out a
case for the relief she was seeking in the notice of motion and
judgment should be granted
in favour of the applicant in terms of
prayers 1.1, 1.2, 1.3 and prayer 2 of the notice of motion.
[32]
The applicant handed a draft order to court
and the following order is made:
1. An order is made in terms of the
draft order which is marked with an “X”.
R STRYDOM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Heard
on:
18 March 2024
Delivered
on:
20 March 2024
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Adv. W. Pye SC
with: Adv. C. Rowji
Instructed
by:
Seanego Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
Adv. M. Tonyela
Instructed
by:
Moganelwa Attorneys
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