Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 959South Africa
South African Legal Practical Council v Louw and Others (2023/068293) [2024] ZAGPJHC 959; 2025 (1) SA 447 (GJ) (30 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 September 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## South African Legal Practical Council v Louw and Others (2023/068293) [2024] ZAGPJHC 959; 2025 (1) SA 447 (GJ) (30 September 2024)
South African Legal Practical Council v Louw and Others (2023/068293) [2024] ZAGPJHC 959; 2025 (1) SA 447 (GJ) (30 September 2024)
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sino date 30 September 2024
FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION – Legal Practice Council –
Disciplinary
process
–
LPC
approaching court for striking off before full disciplinary
hearing – Understating of firm’s annual fee income
–
Implemented it deliberately to avoid attracting B-BBEE
requirements – Papers lack an adequate factual substrate
–
Fuller picture of firm’s affairs and respondent’s role
in them required – LPC ought to have engaged
statutory
powers before seeking respondents’ striking off –
Application dismissed –
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
,
s 44.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
30
September 2024
Case
No.
2023-068293
In
the matter between:
SOUTH
AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Applicant
and
JAN
GYSBERT LOUW
First
Respondent
JUDITH
WILLIAMS
Second
Respondent
KATLEGO
POOE
Third
Respondent
YOLANDI
MARGUERITE WATSON
Fourth
Respondent
NHLABATHI
GYS LOUW INC
Fifth
Respondent
Summary
Where the facts
underlying an application to strike off a legal practitioner are
likely to be contested or obscure, the Legal Practice
Council will
generally be required to convene a disciplinary committee in terms of
Chapter 4 of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
before approaching a
court for a striking off order. A court nonetheless retains the
power, in terms of
section 44
(1) of the Act, to entertain a striking
off application without a disciplinary inquiry having taken place.
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom SUTHERLAND DJP agrees):
1
The applicant, the LPC, applies for an order striking
the first to fourth respondents from the roll of legal practitioners.
The
first to fourth respondents are attorneys employed by the fifth
respondent, Nhlabathi Gys Louw. They were once directors of the
firm,
but have each relinquished their directorships as a result of the
events giving rise to this application.
The
misconduct alleged
2
The application is based substantially upon a dishonest
scheme apparently conceived of and executed by the first respondent,
Mr.
Louw, when he was the
de facto
managing partner of the
firm. The scheme involved understating the firm’s annual fee
income by paying the firm’s expenses
directly from its trust
account, and drawing down the professional fees due to the firm after
the firm’s expenses had been
deducted from them. This permitted
the firm to state its annual fee income at just below R50 million. At
the relevant time, the
firm’s true fee income was in excess of
R100 million.
3
The purpose of this scheme was to avoid attracting the
more onerous Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment (BBBEE)
requirements
that would have been applied to the firm had its
reported fee income exceeded R50 million, and with which the firm
could not comply.
Given that the firm relied, in large part, on
conveyancing instructions from major financial institutions, a
failure to comply
with the BBBEE requirements routinely applied by
those institutions would probably have reduced drastically the number
of instructions
the firm could expect to receive.
4
There is no serious dispute before us that this scheme
is dishonest and that Mr. Louw implemented it deliberately to achieve
the
purpose I have set out. Beyond that, however, the facts on which
the LPC claims a striking off order become considerably murkier.
For
one thing, the understatement of the firm’s fees is but one of
several species of misconduct alleged in the papers against
the firm.
These range from essentially bribing estate agents to send
conveyancing instructions to the firm, touting, tax evasion
and
failure to keep proper accounts. The LPC makes no attempt on the
papers to differentiate between the first to fourth respondents
when
alleging knowledge of the wrongdoing or examining their degree of
culpability for it. In addition, there are several
issues hotly
disputed on the papers, including whether the conduct underlying
these allegations took place; whether, on a proper
analysis, the
conduct that did take place amounted to the transgression of the Code
of Conduct for Legal Practitioners; and whether
each of the
first
to fourth
respondents committed the misconduct, knew about it
or were in a position to stop it.
5
For these reasons, the papers lack an adequate factual
substrate on which we are able to undertake the three-stage inquiry
that
would usually fall to us: first, to determine whether the
misconduct alleged actually took place; second, to determine whether
the misconduct established means that each of the first to fourth
respondents is no longer fit and proper to practice as an attorney;
and third, to determine the appropriate sanction, if any, to be
imposed following upon the conclusions reached on the first two
legs
of the inquiry (see, for example,
Legal Practice Council v Mkhize
2024 (1) SA 189
(GP)).
6
Mr. Stocker, who appeared for the LPC, was unable to
convince us that the papers are adequate to support findings on each
of these
issues, in relation to each form of misconduct alleged and
in relation to each of the first to fourth respondents. His fall-back
position was that the understatement of the firm’s fee income
is essentially common cause, as is Mr. Louw’s culpability
for
it. Mr. Stocker submitted that, on those common cause facts, each of
the first to fourth respondents must be struck from the
roll. Mr.
Louw’s fate, Mr. Stocker submitted, is clear from his own
admissions of dishonesty. The second, third and fourth
respondents
must also be struck off because they knew, ought to have known, or
are deemed to have known, about Mr. Louw’s
misconduct, and are
as responsible for it as he is.
7
It is true that the rule has generally been that
directors of a law firm hold fiduciary duties toward the firm, an
incident of which
is that they may not plead ignorance of the firm’s
financial affairs where a misappropriation of trust funds is
established.
This rule appears to have been applied where trust funds
have been stolen, or where a trust fund has been run unlawfully at a
deficit
(see
Limpopo Provincial Council of the Legal Practice
Council v Chueu Incorporated
[2023] ZASCA 112
(26 July 2023),
paragraphs 26 to 30 and the cases cited there).
8
I am not convinced, however, that this general rule
necessarily implies that each of the first to fourth respondents in
this case
is liable to be struck off. In the first place, the nature
of the scheme Mr. Louw implemented was not a misappropriation of
trust
funds in the true sense. It is not as if the money paid to the
firm did not end up exactly where it should have been. The problem
is
how the firm accounted for the movement of its money. There is no
suggestion of theft. Nor has the firm’s trust account
ever
shown a deficit. What happened instead was that fee income was paid
out directly from the firm’s trust account
to
meet the firm’s expenses
. The fee income ought properly
to have been paid into the firm’s business account, and
expended from there. Had that been
done, there would have been no
misconduct.
9
I have no doubt that the deceptive nature of the scheme
leaves Mr. Louw with a lot to answer for, but I cannot say that his
striking
off is inevitable without a fuller picture of the firm’s
affairs and his role in them. Moreover, unlike in a standard case
of
theft or another plainly unlawful misappropriation, it is not clear
to me that the other former directors misconducted themselves,
and,
if they did, whether they nevertheless remain fit and proper to
practice. Without establishing what they knew or ought to
have known,
and when they knew or ought to have known it, that evaluation cannot
take place. In other words, beyond cases of theft
or similarly clear
instances of misappropriation of trust funds, I cannot conclude, as a
matter of principle, that knowledge of
the details of a firm’s
accounts must always and everywhere be imputed to each of the
directors of that firm, with the result
that any misstatement of the
firm’s financial position must inexorably lead to their
disbarment.
10
Secondly, the first to fourth respondents’
shareholdings in the firm, and the level of power they could
reasonably have been
expected to exercise over the firm’s
affairs, are issues that must be explored in much greater depth than
the papers in this
case presently do. The impression arising from the
papers is that Mr. Louw ran the firm on his own. The second
respondent, Ms.
Williams, is his wife, and no account has been taken
of the extent, if any, that this might affect her culpability or the
appropriate
sanction if any is found. The third and fourth
respondents’ shareholdings in the firm were not such as to
ground the inference
that they could realistically have challenged
Mr. Louw’s grip over the firm’s affairs.
The
need for a full disciplinary hearing
11
For all these reasons, no relief can be granted on the
papers before us, but the first to fourth respondents still stand in
peril
of disciplinary sanction, up to and perhaps including an order
that they be stuck off. There is a clear need to explore their
conduct,
to determine their level of culpability and to formulate the
appropriate sanction.
12
Chapter 4 of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
provides
the LPC with a full suite of statutory powers to investigate and
discipline legal practitioners, and to determine the
extent of their
culpability. In the event that the material facts underlying any
allegation of misconduct that may lead to striking
off are contested
or obscure, the exercise of these powers will normally be a necessary
step before approaching the court for a
striking off order.
13
The main dispute between the parties in this case is
whether the LPC ought to have engaged these statutory powers before
seeking
the first to fourth respondents’ striking off. On the
facts of this case, and for the reasons I have given, the LPC clearly
should have done so.
14
This is, in fact, what the LPC’s own
investigating committee, established under
section 37
of the Act,
recommended should happen. On 3 April 2023, having considered a
preliminary report detailing what it called “
prima facie
evidence” of wrongdoing, the investigating committee referred
the matter to the LPC in terms of
section 37
(3) (a) of the Act. That
provision authorises the LPC to establish a disciplinary committee to
oversee “misconduct proceedings”
if “
prima facie
evidence” of misconduct is found. The investigating committee
also recommended that the LPC consider whether an urgent application
to suspend the first to fourth respondents from practice ought to be
instituted under
section 43
of the Act. For reasons that are not
clear from the record, the LPC rejected the recommendation that a
disciplinary committee be
established and resolved to proceed
directly to court for a suspension order. It then sought striking off
orders on substantially
the same facts as it sought the suspension
order.
15
It should not have done so. Properly construed, the
investigating committee’s recommendation presupposed that there
was
prima facie
evidence of misconduct that might warrant
immediate suspension. That was plainly why an urgent application
under
section 43
was suggested. However, the committee also concluded
that a disciplinary inquiry was necessary to test the
prima facie
evidence of wrongdoing it found, and to ascertain whether definitive
findings of misconduct could be reached. Eschewing that approach,
the
LPC chose to ask the court for final relief merely on the
prima
facie
evidence of misconduct placed before the investigating
committee, without convening the disciplinary inquiry the committee
recommended.
In doing so, the LPC deprived itself, and the court, of
the definitive factual findings necessary to reach fair conclusions
on
each of the first to fourth respondents’ culpability and the
appropriate sanction if such culpability is found.
16
Plainly, oral evidence from each of the first to fourth
respondents, subject to cross-examination, is essential to provide
the answers
so lacking on the papers about whether all of the
misconduct alleged has been established, what each of the respondents
knew about
it, when they knew, and what level of culpability they
each have for that misconduct. Of particular importance in this case
is
whether that culpability, if any, is direct, or whether
culpability must be imputed by virtue of the first to fourth
respondents’
status as directors of the firm.
17
In principle, of course, it is open to us to refer the
striking off application to trial, and to explore the respondents’
oral evidence ourselves. However, I do not think that would be a wise
use of judicial resources on a trial roll which is already
notoriously overburdened. In any event, the LPC has adequate power to
refer
prima facie
misconduct to a disciplinary committee,
which may then recommend that the LPC seek striking off relief after
a full hearing. In
clothing the LPC with such power Parliament chose
to place the duty to mature the facts underlying a striking off
application squarely
on the LPC. There is no reason why we should
undertake a task that the LPC has been specifically empowered to
execute.
18
Mr. Morison, who appeared together with Mr. Salukazana
for the respondents, submitted that, properly interpreted, the
Legal
Practice Act lay
s down an absolute requirement that a disciplinary
hearing must be held in every case of misconduct that might require
court sanction
before a court may be approached. I do not see how
that submission can survive contact with the plain text of
section 44
(1), which states that “[t]he provisions of this Act do not
derogate in any way from the power of the High Court to adjudicate
upon and make orders in respect of matters concerning the conduct of
a legal practitioner, candidate legal practitioner, or a juristic
entity”. The “power” referred to in
section 44
(1)
can be none other than the common law power the High Court has always
possessed to discipline its officers, including attorneys.
To make
the exercise of that power conditional, as matter of principle, upon
the LPC first holding a full disciplinary inquiry
would be
inconsistent with its explicit preservation in
section 44
(1).
0cm; line-height: 150%">
19
In any event, on the facts of this case, a disciplinary
inquiry is necessary. The failure to hold one renders the LPC’s
approach
to this court premature. Its application for the first to
fourth respondents’ striking off will be dismissed, but nothing
stops the LPC from approaching the court again with a record of the
disciplinary inquiry, and a reasoned motivation for the first
to
fourth respondents’ striking off which is justified on the
basis of that record.
Costs
20
The LPC initially applied for urgent interim relief
suspending the first to fourth respondents from practice. Crutchfield
J struck
that application from her urgent roll for the week of 6
September 2023. Crutchfield J was in my view appropriately critical
of
the LPC’s failure to give full effect to its investigation
committee’s recommendation, and its delay in seeking urgent
relief. Crutchfield J reserved the question of the costs in the
urgent application, which we must now determine.
21
A further abortive hearing took place on 20 February
2024. After that hearing, the respondents sought and were granted the
recusal
of one of the two Judges allocated to hear the application
for final relief. That inevitably meant that the other Judge also had
to recuse herself. The costs of that hearing were not dealt with in
the recusal judgment. Those costs also now fall to us to determine.
22
Ordinarily, professional bodies are not mulcted in
costs when they seek to strike off or suspend legal practitioners,
even if they
are unsuccessful. They are, in fact, generally entitled
to costs on the attorney and client scale, whatever the outcome of
their
approach to court. This general rule recognises the important
role they play in enabling the court to fairly discharge its
disciplinary
functions (see, for example,
Law Society of the
Northern Provinces v Dube
[2012] 4 All SA 251
(SCA), paragraph
33).
23
However, the general rule, being general, has its
limits. The LPC benefits from a generous costs regime because it is
expected to
fairly and professionally assist the court in the
discharge of its disciplinary functions. Where it fails to provide
the assistance
a court is entitled to expect, that regime may be put
aside, because costs remain in the court’s discretion.
24
I do not think the usual costs regime can apply in this
case. The LPC has refused to convene a disciplinary inquiry against
the
advice of its own investigation committee without explaining its
decision to do so. It has claimed urgency where manifestly no urgency
exists. It seeks orders that it ought to have known could not be
granted on the established facts. Moreover, the LPC has swept
aside
the first to fourth respondents’ attempts to engage with it on
their degree of culpability, and on the extent to which
they may be
prepared to accept some form of sanction for their involvement in, or
failure to prevent, at least some of the misconduct
alleged against
the firm. The LPC has not explained why these overtures were
rejected. The LPC’s founding papers were also
over-long,
repetitive and obscure.
25
Had the LPC taken its cue from the judgment of
Crutchfield J, re-evaluated its approach, and reverted to the advice
of its investigation
committee, there would have been no basis to
mulct it in costs. However, it persisted with an application for
final relief that
was very likely to fail. That is not the conduct of
a professional public body seeking only the public good.
26
For all these reasons, the LPC will pay the
respondents’ costs, on the ordinary scale. The matter is of
sufficient complexity
to justify counsel’s costs on the “B”
scale.
27
The respondents also sought the costs reserved by Motha
J in
Williams v South African Legal Practice Council
(case no.
2023-064163). In that matter, the second, third and fourth
respondents sought to compel the LPC to issue them with certificates
of good standing. They were substantially successful, but that matter
was not enrolled before us, and no argument has been addressed
to us
on whether the circumstances of that case justify a costs award
either way. Those costs remain reserved, and may be argued,
if
necessary, in due course in the ordinary manner.
Order
28
Accordingly –
28.1 The
application is dismissed.
28.2 The applicant
must convene a disciplinary inquiry in terms of section 37 (4) of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2024 before
it takes any further steps to
suspend the first to fourth respondents from practice or strike the
first to fourth respondents from
the roll of legal practitioners on
the basis of the
prima facie
evidence of misconduct identified
by its investigating committee on 3 April 2023.
28.3 The applicant
is directed to pay the respondents’ costs, including the costs
of the 6 September 2023 and 20 February
2024 hearings, and including
the costs of two counsel where employed. Counsel’s costs may be
taxed on the “B”
scale.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 30 September 2024.
HEARD
ON:
29
August 2024
DECIDED
ON:
30
September 2024
For
the Applicant:
R
Stocker
Instructed
by RW Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
L
Morison SC
M
Salukazana
Instructed
by Webber Wentzel
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