Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 559South Africa
Groundup News NPC and Others v South African Legal Practice Council and Others (20150/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 559; 2023 (4) SA 617 (GJ) (24 May 2023)
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Groundup News NPC and Others v South African Legal Practice Council and Others (20150/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 559; 2023 (4) SA 617 (GJ) (24 May 2023)
Groundup News NPC and Others v South African Legal Practice Council and Others (20150/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 559; 2023 (4) SA 617 (GJ) (24 May 2023)
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sino date 24 May 2023
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 20150/2021
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
24.05.23
In
the matter between:
GROUNDUP
NEWS NPC
First
Applicant
NATHAN
GEFFEN
Second
Applicant
RAYMOND
JOSEPH
Third
Applicant
And
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
First
Respondent
CHAIRPERSON
OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Second
Respondent
MR
Y MAYET
Third
Respondent
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Fourth
Respondent
LESLEY
NKHUMBULENI RAMULIFHO
Fifth
Respondent
Neutral
Citation:
Groundup
News NPC & 2 Others v The South African Legal Practice Council &
4 Others
(Case
No. 20150/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 559(24 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
YACOOB
J
:
1.
The second and third applicants, Mr Geffen and Mr Joseph, together
with Mr Louw, who is also the applicants’ attorney of
record,
lodged a complaint with the first respondent (“the LPC”)
against the fifth respondent (“Mr Ramulifho”).
The
complaint concerned Mr Ramulifho’s conduct in an application
for an interdict against the first applicant (“GroundUp”).
2.
The complaint was dismissed, and the LPC advised the complainants
that no appeal would be possible because an appeal tribunal
had not
yet been established. The applicants seek to review the dismissal of
the complaint.
3.
Only Mr Ramulifho opposed the application. He filed no affidavit, but
delivered a notice in terms of Rule 6(5)(d)(iii), raising
points of
law in opposition. He also delivered a notice to strike out certain
paragraphs in the founding affidavit, but did not
persist with the
application to strike out.
4.
The fourth respondent (“the Gauteng LPC”) filed an
explanatory affidavit to describe the processes it followed, but
does
not oppose.
5.
There is therefore no factual dispute before the court, and the
applicants’ version of the facts is undisputed.
6.
GroundUp publishes news and opinions online, focusing on the public
interest and in particular social justice. Mr Geffen is its
editor
and Mr Joseph a journalist who has written for GroundUp. Mr Ramulifho
is an attorney, who featured negatively in a series
of articles
written by Mr Joseph about a recipient of grants from the National
Lotteries Commission.
7.
Mr Ramulifho launched an urgent interdict application to prevent the
publication of allegations about him, and to obtain the
removal from
GroundUp’s website of articles that referred to him. He also
sought a retraction. The application was struck
for lack of urgency.
Mr Ramulifho launched the application through his own firm and acted
as his own attorney.
8.
The complaint to the LPC was based on allegations that Mr Ramulifho,
in prosecuting this interdict application, falsified documents
and
forged signatures on affidavits. The allegations were of perjury and
forgery, obviously serious allegations against an ordinary
person,
but which take on far more weight when made against an officer of the
court, even when that person is acting in his personal
capacity. This
is because the integrity of officers of the court must be beyond
question, as this impacts on the integrity of the
whole system of the
administration of justice.
9.
After Mr Ramulifho responded to the complaint and the complainants
replied, the complaint was referred to an investigating committee
of
the LPC. The “committee” was made up of one person, the
third respondent, Mr Mayet.
10.
The decision of the “committee” was to dismiss the
complaint on the basis that he had “given a reasonable
explanation to the allegations made against him” and that there
was no reasonable prospect of a charge of misconduct against
him
succeeding. As I pointed out above, the LPC advised the complainants
that no appeal was possible because an appeal tribunal
had not yet
been established.
11.
The applicants contend that the dismissal of the complaint without
any steps taken to investigate it is both procedurally and
substantively unlawful.
12.
The reasons provided by the LPC for the dismissal of the complaint
are, essentially, that
12.1. the allegations
would indicate professional misconduct if they are true, and if Mr
Ramulifho conducted himself as alleged
in his capacity as a legal
practitioner;
12.2. the evidence
presented in support of the complaint was insufficient, and the LPC
required the allegations to be tested in
another forum or somehow
verified;
12.3. the LPC
cannot investigate on hearsay allegations or insufficient evidence;
12.4. the complaint
was seriously flawed, and
12.5. the onus was
on the complainant to provide sufficient evidence to persuade the
committee that a tribunal might or could
find for the complainant.
13.
The affidavit filed by the Gauteng LPC sets out the steps taken once
the complaint was received. The Gauteng LPC takes pains
to explain
that the affidavit in no way constitutes an attempt to oppose or
justify, but simply to “lay bare” for the
court’s
evaluation what was done, and that it abides the decision of the
court.
14.
The Gauteng LPC acknowledges that Mr Mayet considered the matter only
on the papers provided, that is, the complaint, Mr Ramulifho’s
response, which consisted purely of procedural objections, and the
complainants’ reply. He was of the view that the complaint
should be dismissed because the conduct in question “did not
necessarily warrant misconduct proceedings”, for the reasons
that Mr Ramulifho was not guilty of misconduct, that Mr Ramulifho had
given a reasonable explanation for his conduct and that there
was no
reasonable prospect of success in a misconduct charge. This despite
the fact that he also opined that, if the allegations
were true,
there was serious misconduct, and despite the fact that Mr Ramulifho
had not given any explanation for his conduct,
let alone a reasonable
one.
15.
The applicants seek the review of the decision in terms of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”).
They submit that even if the decision is not one in terms of PAJA,
the same grounds found review in accordance with the principles
of
legality.
16. The grounds on which
the applicants rely are:
16.1. the Investigating
Committee failed to comply with section 37(3) of the Legal Practice
Act, 28 of 2014 (“the LPA”);
16.2. the Investigating
Committee committed an error of law in fundamentally misunderstanding
its role, its powers and its obligations;
16.3. the dismissal
of the complaint is irrational and unreasonable, and
16.4. the
Investigating Committee failed to take into account relevant
considerations.
17. The points raised by
Mr Ramulifho in opposition in his Rule 6(5)(d)(iii) notice are:
17.1. because Mr Louw,
who was the deponent to the affidavit making the complaint, is not a
party to this application, none of the
applicants have
locus
standi
;
17.2. the complaint
was defective because it was based on hearsay and conjecture;
17.3. there was no
allegation that Mr Ramulifho committed acts of misconduct in his
capacity as an attorney;
17.4. the falsified bank
statements complained of were not statements of a trust account and
therefore the LPC had no jurisdiction
over them;
17.5. there was no
allegation that the non-profit organisation that had allegedly been
defrauded had “complained to the relevant
authorities”;
17.6. the LPC cannot be
convinced to institute an investigation on inadmissible evidence and
conjecture;
17.7. the allegations are
based on a matter pending in the High Court and there is a criminal
complaint, and therefore the LPC has
to wait until the High Court
matter and police investigation are finalized;
17.8. the decision of the
LPC is not final as the complainants can still submit a proper
complaint, and is therefore not reviewable;
17.9. the LPC cannot
consider a defective complaint as that would be contrary to the Rule
of Law;
17.10. it is not
incorrect to say that the LPC did not investigate as it read the
entire bundle, and
17.11. it is not
for the LPC to make a case against an accused but the complainant.
18.
A number of these points, specifically those summarized in 17.3, 17.4
and 17.5, deal with the merits of the complaint, rather
than the
grounds of review. The merits of the complaint are not before me. I
do, however, find it necessary to comment that it
is mind-boggling
that an attorney appears to take the position that he is entitled to
act as the applicants allege he has acted
and bear no professional
consequence if there is no allegation that he acted in his
professional capacity.
19.
As far as the points dealing with the merits are concerned, it is
also necessary to say that the LPC has made no finding on
those. It
has declined to do so, because it took the position, as does the Mr
Ramulifho, that it is the duty of the complainant
to do so. This of
course is the nub of the issue raised by the applicants.
20.
This leaves the question of
locus standi
, whether the High
Court matter and the police investigation first had to be concluded
(that appeared to be one of the reasons for
dismissing the
complaint), whether the decision of the LPC is final and therefore
reviewable, and the questions of the validity
of the complaint and
the duty of the LPC to investigate, which include the points
encapsulated in 17.2, 17.6, 17.9,
17.10 and 17.11 above.
21.
The basis of Mr Ramulifho’s
locus standi
point is that
Mr Louw was the deponent to the affidavit setting out the complaint
to the LPC. If he is not an applicant then nobody
else has
locus
standi
. This is not the case. Mr Geffen and Mr Joseph were also
complainants and have
locus standi
. There is no reason that
co-complainants should be prevented from bringing a review
application because another co- complainant
does not elect to do so.
22.
Mr Ramulifho submits that because Mr Geffen and Mr Joseph did not
submit confirmatory affidavits together with Mr Louw’s
affidavits, they do not have
locus standi
. In my view their
submission of confirmatory affidavits in the complaint is irrelevant.
They were named as complainants. They did
in reply submit
confirmatory affidavits, but in any event have confirmed on oath
before this court that they were complainants.
They have indubitably
established
locus standi
.
23.
GroundUp was not a complainant and does not have
locus standi
on
the basis of being a complainant. It was submitted for the first
applicant that it has
locus standi
in the public interest, and
also that it being a party in the litigation which formed the basis
for the complaint gave it
locus standi
. Neither of these
grounds were pleaded.
24.
In any event there is no reason for me to consider these grounds
because it is sufficient for the purposes of me dealing with
this
application that Mr Geffen and Mr Joseph have
locus standi
.
25.
The contention that the High Court interdict application has to be
determined before the LPC can consider a complaint also holds
no
water. While it may be easier to make a finding if there is already a
judgment finding that Mr Ramulifho’s version relied
on
falsified documents, this does not prevent the LPC investigating. The
matter before the High Court is not specifically on the
merits of the
complaint to the LPC, and therefore there is no obligation for the
LPC to wait before it investigates, or on the
complainants to wait
before they complain.
26.
Mr Ramulifho is
dominus litus
in the application, and could
delay the LPC investigation simply by failing to set the matter down
if that was the case. Of course
it is within the power of the other
parties in that matter to set it down but there is no obligation on
them.
27.
The existence of a criminal complaint is also irrelevant to the
complaint to the LPC. It has different consequences and may
well have
different burdens of proof. The outcome of each may be considered in
determining the other, but ultimately each has to
follow its own
process.
28.
Mr Ramulifho relies on the contention that the complainants are not
barred from submitting a “proper” complaint
to submit
that the decision of the LPC was not final. This of course begs the
question whether there was a “proper”
complaint before
the LPC in the first place. If there was, and the LPC was required to
investigate, and did not, the LPC’s
decision was unlawful.
29.
The LPC has not asked for further evidence, information or but has
instead stated that it regards the matter as finalized and
it has
closed its file. It advised the complainants not only that no
internal appeal was available, but also that they could proceed
to
review the decision in the High Court.
30.
The dismissal of the complaint and the closing of the file are final,
as is the investigation or failure to investigate by the
LPC. There
is no intimation that the process is ongoing. I am satisfied that the
decision of the LPC is final, has external legal
effect, and is
reviewable.
31.
The questions raised by Mr Ramulifho regarding the validity of the
complaint and the duty of the LPC to investigate essentially
gainsay
the grounds relied upon by the applicants for review. Their merit
will depend on my consideration of those grounds and
I deal with them
in the course of considering the merits of the review.
32.
The Preamble to the LPA states that the purpose of the Act includes
regulating the legal profession in the public interest and
ensuring
the accountability of the legal profession to the public. In my view
this is relevant to how the role of the LPC in complaints
against
legal practitioners is interpreted.
33.
Section 37(1) requires the LPC to establish investigating committees
“to conduct investigations of all complaints of misconduct
against legal practitioners”.
34. Section 37(3)
requires an investigating committee:
after investigating a
complaint, if it is satisfied that-
(a)
the legal
practitioner, or the candidate legal practitioner concerned
may,
on
the
basis
of
available prima facie
evidence, be guilty of misconduct that, in terms of the code of
conduct, warrants misconduct proceedings,
refer the matter to the
Council for adjudication by a disciplinary committee; or
(b)
the
complaint should be dismissed on the grounds that the conduct in
question does not necessarily warrant misconduct proceedings,
as set
out in the code of conduct, it must dismiss the complaint, inform the
Council, the complainant and the legal practitioner,
candidate legal
practitioner or juristic entity of its finding and the reasons for
it, whereafter the complainant may appeal in
terms of section 41, if
the complainant is aggrieved by-
(i)
the manner in which the investigating committee conducted its
investigation; or
(ii)
the
outcome of the investigating committee.
35.
It is clear that all complaints must be investigated. The
investigating committee must then satisfy itself either
35.1. that the legal
practitioner may be guilty of misconduct for which misconduct
proceedings are warranted in terms of the Code
of Conduct,on “the
available
prima facie
evidence”, in which case it refers
the matter for adjudication by a disciplinary committee,
or
35.2. that the conduct
does not necessarily warrant misconduct proceedings, in which case
the complaint must be dismissed.
36. What is clear is that
the first step is for the committee to conduct an investigation.
The
next step is for the committee to decide whether the “available
prima facie
evidence” may lead to a finding of
misconduct which is the sort of misconduct that requires misconduct
proceedings. If so,
the matter must be referred to a disciplinary
committee.
37.
Mr Ramulifho suggests that a reading of the complaint documents
consists of investigation. It may be that in some cases reading
the
complaint and response is sufficient investigation. It is not
necessarily the case, and it is not so in this case.
38.
This is because the response of the investigating committee shows
that there was conduct complained of by a legal practitioner
which
the committee considered would constituted professional misconduct if
they are true and if they were committed in a professional
capacity.
39.
The committee then did not investigate any further. Instead it
decided that the obligation to investigate ended at finding that
the
necessary evidence had not been provided by the complainant.
40.
The committee has extensive investigative powers, which are set out
in Rule 40 of the LPC Rules. It chose, incomprehensively,
not to
exercise them. It is required to do so. The committee is not a court
which has to decide matters on pleadings and evidence
placed before
it by the parties. There is no onus on a complainant. A complainant
simply has to bring conduct to the attention
of the committee. Any
other interpretation would be prejudicial to the public interest.
41.
The investigating committee does not function as a court. A complaint
is not the same as motion proceedings, and a complainant
does not
bear any
onus
. The investigating committee has to investigate.
It must follow up on the issues raised, obtain information and
interview witnesses,
if the matter requires it. On the basis of
investigating committee’s own response to this complaint, it
was clear that this
is a matter that required it.
42.
It is the disciplinary committee which must make the decision whether
a case is made out, if the matter is referred to it, and
whether the
evidence is good enough to establish guilt of the legal practitioner.
43.
To expect a member of the public complaining about the conduct of a
legal practitioner to bring a complete case would make a
mockery of
the what the LPA seeks to achieve. The LPC is there to assist members
of the public, rather than to protect legal practitioners
by making
it harder for members of the public to obtain redress. The approach
taken by the LPC in this matter is fundamentally
flawed and
inconsistent with not only the literal meaning of the LPA, but also
with its stated purpose.
44.
The use of the phrase “available
prima facie
evidence”
shows that the committee does not have to decide whether a watertight
case exists. It is not for the committee to
evaluate the probity of
the evidence. The committee has to evaluate only
prima facie
whether, if the evidence is found to be established, there would
be a guilty finding. It has already made that finding, yet it
dismissed
the complaint.
45.
Further, the investigating committee had to be satisfied that
misconduct proceedings were “not necessarily warranted”.
Taking into account the questions it raised, and the response of Mr
Ramulifho it is clear that there was no basis on which the
investigating committee could have been satisfied one way or the
other without further investigation.
46. The investigating
committee also relied for the dismissal on a view that
“
the allegations
must first be tested by an authority other than the LPC or be
supported by reasonable and credible verification
and then the
relevant finding or appropriate verification must be presented to the
LPC for investigation of possible misconduct”
47.
This again is inconsistent with the LPA. It is true that the
allegations did not have to be tested by the investigating committee.
That is the function of a disciplinary committee, if the matter is
referred to one. But to require that some other authority must
first
make a decision, or to require that a complainant make out a case
that is already complete and ready to be adjudicated upon
by a
disciplinary committee, makes a mockery of the scheme established by
the LPA, and in fact belies the reason for the existence
of the
investigating committee, before a matter goes to a disciplinary
committee. It is for the investigating committee to investigate
whether reasonable and credible verification may be obtained, and if
so, to obtain it, rather than to sit back and say to a complainant
that they have not done so.
48.
By misconstruing its role, the investigating committee has committed
an error of law.
49.
The decision was also not rationally connected to the information
before it.
Specifically,
one of the reasons given was that Mr Ramulifho had “given a
reasonable explanation of his conduct”. Mr
Ramulifho gave no
explanation whatsoever of his conduct. His only response was to raise
problems with the manner in which the complaint
was presented. He did
not deal with its substance at all. In my view this also supports the
conclusion that the decision was so
unreasonable that no reasonable
person could have taken it.
50.
It can be seen then that in this context, the points raised by Mr
Ramulifho about the validity of the complaint and the role
of the LPC
can hold no water.
51.
For the reasons set out above, I am satisfied that the decision to
dismiss the complaint is reviewable, and that the applicants
have
made out a case for the relief sought, which is to review and set
aside the decision, and remit the matter to the LPC for
proper
investigation.
52.
I do not see any reason not to award costs occasioned by opposition
to the application against Mr Ramulifho. Even if he had
not opposed,
the applicants would have had to bring an application for the relief
they seek, so they are only entitled to costs
occasioned by
opposition. Had the applicants sought costs against the LPC
respondents, it is entirely possible that they would
have been
awarded, as the application was necessitated by the LPC’s
conduct.
53.
I make the following order:
a) the failure of the
first respondent and/or the third respondent and/or the fourth
respondent to investigate the second and third
applicants’
complaint against the fifth respondent, Mr Ramulifho (complaint
number 5192/2020) (“the complaint”),
is unlawful, invalid
and unconstitutional;
b) the decision of the
third respondent and/or the first respondent and/or the fourth
respondent, dated 13 October 2020, to dismiss
the complaint is
unlawful, invalid and unconstitutional;
c) the decision of the
third respondent and/or the first respondent and/or the fourth
respondent, dated 13 October 2020, to dismiss
the complaint is
reviewed and set aside;
d) the matter is remitted
to the first respondent and the first respondent is directed to –
a. convene an
investigative committee, in terms of
section 37(1)
of the
Legal
Practice Act 28 of 2014
, to investigate the complaint afresh, and
b. conduct a proper
investigation into the complaint, in accordance with the requirements
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
, read with the Legal Practice
Council Rules, 2018;
e) the third respondent,
Mr Y Mayet, shall in no way be involved in the fresh investigation to
be conducted, and
f) the costs of the
application occasioned by the fifth respondent’s opposition are
to be paid by the fifth respondent,
including the costs of two
counsel where so employed.
# S. YACOOB JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
S. YACOOB JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel
for the applicant:
N
Ferreira and K Harding-Moerdyk
Instructed
by:
Lionel
Murray Schwormstedt & Louw
Counsel
for the fifth respondent:
R
Schoeman
Instructed
by:
Elliot
Attorneys Inc
Date
of hearing: 10 November 2022
Date
of judgment: 24 May 2023
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