Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 372South Africa
Mudzusi Molobela Attorneys and Another v Mokhoantle and Others (040016/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 372 (14 March 2023)
Headnotes
the cause of action relied on by the applicants is as follows (all quotations are rendered verbatim):
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mudzusi Molobela Attorneys and Another v Mokhoantle and Others (040016/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 372 (14 March 2023)
Mudzusi Molobela Attorneys and Another v Mokhoantle and Others (040016/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 372 (14 March 2023)
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## REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
040016/2022
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
MUDZUSI
MOLOBELA ATTORNEYS
First
Applicant
NOMAKHOSANA
SIHUNU N.O.
(In
her capacity as executrix of Estate Sihunu)
Second
Applicant
and
ABRAM
R MOKHOANTLE
First
Respondent
NKITI
D SHUMENI MOKHOANTLE
Second
Respondent
STANDARD
BANK VANDERBIJL PARK BRANCH
Third
Respondent
ABSA
BANK VANDERBIJL PARK BRANCH
Fourth
Respondent
FIRST
NATIONAL BANK VANDERBIJL PARK BRANCH
Fifth
Respondent
NEDBANK
VANDERBIJL PARK BRANCH
Sixth
Respondent
CAPITEC
VANDERBIJL PARK BRANCH
Seventh
Respondent
RADINGOANA
ATTORNEYS
Eight
Respondent
Judgment
LEECH, AJ:
1 On 3
November 2022 the applicants obtained an
ex
parte
attachment, on an urgent basis
and in the form of a
rule nisi
,
of the first and second respondents’ bank accounts. On a
belated and extended return day, an opposed application for the
confirmation of the
rule
served before me.
2
After hearing argument from the first and second
applicants and the respondents’ legal representatives, I
dismissed the application
thereby discharging the
rule
.
At the time of doing so, I gave an
ex
tempore
judgment setting out my
reasons.
3
I subsequently received a request, in terms of the
Uniform Rules of Court, for the reasons for my order. Unfortunately,
the transcribers
have been unable to retrieve or transcribe the
ex
tempore
judgment.
4
The following written reasons therefore serve as
the reasons for my judgment and order dismissing the application and
discharging
the
rule
.
5
The first applicant is a firm of attorneys. The
second applicant is the
executrix
of the deceased Estate of Mr Sihunu, the second
applicant’s late husband, who prior to his death was a
practising attorney.
I refer to the first applicant as such and to
the first and second applicants collectively as
the
applicants
. I refer to the Late Mr
Sihunu, where appropriate, to differentiate him from the second
applicant.
6
The basis of the application lies in the assertion
that first the Late Mr Sihunu and, after his death, the first
applicant rendered
legal services to the first and second respondents
(
the respondents
)
in a dispute between them and their employer. It is common cause that
both respondents are—and, for some time, have been
on an
ongoing basis—managers employed by the Emfuleni Local
Municipality (
the Municipality
).
7
The eighth respondent are still other attorneys.
In the dying stages of the dispute between the respondents and the
Municipality,
they allegedly took over as the respondents’
attorneys of record. Whatever else they may or may not have done,
they allegedly
received into their trust account monies paid by the
Municipality in favour of the respondents arising out of the
litigation between
the two.
8
The third to seventh respondents are, as their
erroneous citations reflect, the local Vanderbijlpark branches of
various Banks operating
in South Africa (
the
respondent banks
). It is alleged that
the respondents hold or may hold bank accounts with one or more of
the respondent banks.
9
As I have indicated above, in the opening
paragraph, the applicants obtained an order
ex
parte
attaching any monies held by or
on behalf of the respondents in bank accounts operated by the
respondent banks or in the eighth
respondent’s trust account.
The attachment took the form of a
rule
nisi
and, on the return day before me,
the respondents opposed the confirmation of the
rule
and the order attaching their monies.
10
The respondent banks took no part in the
proceedings before me; they abided its outcome. The eighth respondent
indicated that any
monies received had already been paid out to the
respondents prior to the attachment order being served on it. No
relief could
therefore be obtained as against the eighth respondent,
who also took no further part in the proceedings.
11
The founding affidavit contains the barest of
allegations, but in summary the cause of action relied on by the
applicants is as
follows (all quotations are rendered verbatim):
11.1
The respondents allegedly concluded a contingency
fee agreement with the Late Mr Sihunu, in terms of which he undertook
to represent
them (along with thirty-one similarly situated
employees) in their dispute with the Municipality.
11.2
In return for his agreeing to represent them and
in terms of the alleged contingency fee agreement, the respondents
agreed that
the Late Mr Sihunu could retain 25% of the proceeds of
any award made in favour of the respondents as against the
Municipality.
11.3
It is alleged, in the founding affidavit, that the
respondents appointed the Late Mr Sihunu on 10 October 2016. It is
said that
the respondents, on a date not specified, concluded a fee
agreement with the second Applicant. A copy of the said fee
agreements
is untraceable, however some of the applicant/employees in
the same matter which the first and Second respondent are party to it
are attached herein as annexure “MM3”.
11.4
Annexure MM3 is a written agreement ostensibly
concluded on 18 October 2016 between Conrad Netshivhale, Sihunu
Attorneys, and an
unnamed advocate. It is described, on the face of
it, as a “Mandate and Contingency Fee Agreement in terms of the
Contingency Fees Act No 66 of 1997
”.
11.5
Mr Sihunu died ‘on or about the December
2020.’ It is said, further, that:
The First applicant was
later appointed by the 33 managers to continue with the matter and
then inherited the matter with the instruction
of all parties
involved and carry on with the matter until its finality on or about
the 30
th
of July 2021.
11.6
An award was made in favour of the respondents on
30 July 2021 and on or about or during February 2022 the First
applicant received
payment from Emfuleni Municipality which the First
and Second Respondent were beneficiaries, and their monies were
subjected to
deduction of our 25% as per Fee Agreement which was
signed between them and the Second Applicant.
11.7
It appears, however, that at some stage thereafter
the respondents appointed the eighth respondent to represent them,
inter alia
,
for purposes of issuing a writ of execution against the Municipality
for unpaid monies due to them. Furthermore, according to
the founding
affidavit, the respondents informed the deponent that they had
received payment from the eighth respondent of amounts
due to them.
11.8
The respondents declined, however, to pay anything
to the first applicant (or, apparently, to the second applicant),
which prompted
the applicants to bring the application for the
attachment of their bank accounts.
12
The founding affidavit made allegations of a
wholly unsatisfactory nature regarding commercial urgency, the
apprehension of irreparable
harm if an order were not granted in the
applicants’ favour, and why the applicants could not obtain
relief via an alternative
remedy including possibly a damages action
against the gainfully employed respondents.
12.1
Needless to say, these sparse averments do nothing
to convert an already hopeless cause of action into a good one.
12.2
Even if a good cause of action had been made out,
these allegations would have been insufficient to found an
entitlement to an interdict
in the form of an attachment, let alone
on an
ex parte
or
urgent basis.
12.3
Nor did the applicants seek the attachment pending
some other relief or other proceedings to be instituted. The Notice
of Motion
was framed in the form of an attachment
per
se
.
13
I marvel at the skills of the counsel who managed,
in the face of these deficient pleadings, to persuade a court to
issue the
rule nisi
that
was granted on 3 November 2022.
14
I need not dwell on these aspects, however,
because the absence of a validly made out cause of action is
dispositive of the application
and, with it, the outcome of the
rule
.
15
The case before me was founded on the alleged
contingency fee agreement. There was no alternative cause of action
made out on the
papers to the effect that, as attorneys, the first
applicant and the Late Mr Sihunu were entitled to their reasonable or
taxed
fees. There was no taxed bill or even a
pro
forma
bill. There was no statement as
to what work was done, when it was done, by whom (whether the first
applicant or the Late Mr Sihunu),
or what work was done on behalf of
the respondents as compared with the other employees.
16
As far as concerns the contingency fee agreement,
it was accepted before me that
section 3
of the
Contingency Fees Act,
66 of 1997
requires such an agreement to be in writing in the
prescribed form as a precondition to its being valid and enforceable.
17
No written agreement has been placed before me.
The only allegations in the founding affidavit regarding the
conclusion of such
an agreement are those I have recorded and
paraphrased above. To the extent that the deponent thereby attempted
to prove, by secondary
means, the existence of such an agreement,
then his averments come nowhere near being sufficient. Apart from
anything else, it
is not even clear on what basis the deponent can
depose to these averments, which would appear for all intents and
purposes to
be inadmissible hearsay.
18
Without belabouring the point, I am not told when
the alleged contingency fee agreement was concluded by either or both
of the respondents,
that it took exactly the same form as the example
given, or that it was signed on behalf of the Late Mr Sihunu. On that
basis,
I don’t even need to get to the secondary question of
whether or it is possible under the Act to rely on secondary proof of
a contingency fee agreement in the absence of a copy of an actual
signed agreement: the issue does not arise, because the applicants
have failed even to meet that threshold of proof.
19
The position for the first applicant is even
worse, because he does not assert that he was a party to the
contingency fee agreement.
He does not claim that he signed his own
contingency fee agreement with the respondents. As quoted above, he
says that at some
later date he was appointed by the thirty-three
managers to continue with the matter and “inherited” the
matter with
the instruction of all the parties.
20
There are no statements made regarding
section 2
of the Act, what the first applicant’s usual fees are, what the
Late Mr Sihunu’s usual fees were, or whether the 25%
claimed
represents an amount that can permissibly be claimed under the Act.
This despite the fact that the reasonableness of the
fees was placed
in issue.
21
It is impossible, on the strength of the
allegations made in the founding affidavit, to conclude that there is
any contingency fee
agreement at all in favour of the first
applicant, let alone an entitlement based on the original contingency
fee agreement that
allegedly arose as between the respondents and the
Late Mr Sihunu. He has simply failed to make out a cause of action at
all.
22
It is trite that applicants must make out their
case in the founding affidavit and must stand or fall by those
allegations. In the
circumstances of this case, that would include
making sufficient averments as would enable them to discharge the
onus of proving
the agreements on which they rely.
23
The applicants have failed, in the founding
affidavit, to discharge the onus resting on them to allege and prove
the contingency
fee agreements on which they rely or to show that,
arising from any such contingency fee agreement, the respondents are
indebted
to them such as would entitle the applicants to an order
attaching all of the monies held in the respondents’ bank
accounts.
24
I accordingly made the following order:
1
The
rule nisi
issued forth on 3 November 2022 is discharged;
2
The application is dismissed;
3 The
applicants are to pay the first and second respondents’ costs.
B.E. LEECH
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
For
applicant:
Mr
M Tonyela
Instructed
by:
Mudzusi
Molobela Inc.
For
respondent:
Mr
Ike
Motloung
Instructed
by:
Radingoana
Attorneys
Date
of hearing: 14 March 2023
Date
of judgment: 14 March 2023
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