Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 984South Africa
Tjiroze v South African Legal Practice Council and Another (2022-036448) [2023] ZAGPJHC 984 (18 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Tjiroze v South African Legal Practice Council and Another (2022-036448) [2023] ZAGPJHC 984 (18 August 2023)
Tjiroze v South African Legal Practice Council and Another (2022-036448) [2023] ZAGPJHC 984 (18 August 2023)
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sino date 18 August 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022-036448
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
18/08/23
In the matter between:
HITJEVI
OBAFEMI TJIROZE
Applicant
And
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
First
Respondent
THE
JOHANNESBURG SOCIETY OF ADVOCATES
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
WRIGHT J
1.
During 2020, the applicant Mr Tjiroze launched an
application seeking his admission as an advocate. The Legal Practice
Council opposed
and Mr Tjiroze withdrew his application. Now, before
my learned brother Wepener and I are two applications. In the main
application,
launched in October 2022 Mr Tjiroze seeks admission as a
legal practitioner in the form of an advocate.
2.
The Legal Practice Council queried Mr
Tjiroze’s qualifications. Inappropriately, Mr Tjiroze launched
the second application
now before us. It is dated 17 November 2022.
It is an application related to the main application and in it the
following relief
is sought -
“
2. Declaring
that the Applicant's application for admission in terms of
section
3(2)(a)(ii)
of the
Admission of Advocates Act 74 of 1964
, invoked in
accord- ance
section 115
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
, and
serving before this above Honourable Court, paragraph 10.2 of the
Practice Manual and Rule 3A of the Uniform Rules of Court
are
applicable, and the Bar Councils in Johannesburg and Pretoria and/or
PABASA are the appropriate bodies to process the admission
application, in such manner as they deem meet.
3.
Declaring that, unless it is disputed that
the Applicant was such a person entitled to be admitted prior to 1
November 2022 under
the
Admission of Advocates Act, 1964
, the Legal
Practice Council is not entitled to adopt and conduct a dual process
in terms of the requirements of
section 24
of the
Legal Practice Act,
2014
of the Applicant's admissions application, similar to the one
the Bar Councils or PABASA would be entitled to consider, as doing
so
would unduly subject the Applicant unjustly, unfairly and
unreasonably to processes and requirements governed by two distinct
and separate statutes on the same subject-matter.
4.
Declaring that the Applicant is entitled
to invoke section 115 of the Legal Practice Act, 1964, being a person
deemed to be duly
qualified for admis- sion as advocate prior to 1
November 2018;
5.
Declaring that a B.Juris or B.Proc is not
excluded from the meaning of 'degree of degrees' in the proper
interpretation of
section 3(2)(a)(ii)
of the
Admission of Advocates
Act 74 of 1964
;
6.
Declaring that syllabus, on the proper
interpretation of
section 3(2)(a)(ii)
of the
Admission of Advocates
Act 74 of 1964
, means subjects or topics of study in the course of
particular study;
7.
Declaring that confirmation by a university of
a certain matter, on the proper interpretation of
section 3(2)(a)(ii)
of the
Admission of Advocates Act 74 of 1964
, will be deemed as a
university having so certified, as the aforesaid Act does not
prescribe the specific method or format how
a university should
indicate that it has so certified.
”
3.
The quoted prayers are not easy to follow. It was
inappropriate for Mr Tjiroze to seek such findings as a preview to an
issue in
the main application. To compound matters, the application
dated 17 November 2022 was brought on an urgent basis and set down
for
29 November 2022. On that day, the matter had not been properly
enrolled and the question of costs was reserved.
4.
It is a feature of Mr Tjiroze’s
applications that they are not presented in reasonably crisp, polite
terms like they should
be. Instead, some of the papers of Mr Tjiroze
are long, argumentative, impolite and difficult to follow.
5.
I shall attempt below to separate the wheat from
the chaff.
6.
The Legal Practice Council opposes Mr Tjiroze’s
admission. Ms Keetse, the Chairperson of the Gauteng Provincial
Council of
the LPC has deposed to an affidavit in which she sets out
the LPC’s grounds of objection to Mr Tjiroze’s admission.
The LPC seeks punitive costs in the main application and in the
related application of 17 November 2022.
7.
The Johannesburg Society of Advocates, through an
affidavit filed by its Chairperson, Adv Seleka SC has set out facts
relevant to
the application. The JSA opposes the relief sought in the
application of 17 November 2022 but abides the decision of the court
in the main admission application.
8.
In essence, the admission of Mr Tjiroze as
a legal practitioner is opposed on two bases, namely unfitness and
lack of qualification.
The latter ground raises the question of Mr
Tjiroze’s academic qualifications from certain institutions.
# 9.On
21 July 2020, the Constitutional Court handed down judgment in a case
involving Mr Tjiroze. Mr Tjiroze had brought legal proceedings
against the Appeal Board of the Financial Services Board. The case is
cited asTjiroze
v Appeal Board of the Financial Services Board (CCT 271/19) [2020]
ZACC 18.
9.
On
21 July 2020, the Constitutional Court handed down judgment in a case
involving Mr Tjiroze. Mr Tjiroze had brought legal proceedings
against the Appeal Board of the Financial Services Board. The case is
cited as
Tjiroze
v Appeal Board of the Financial Services Board (CCT 271/19) [2020]
ZACC 18.
10.
Speaking for a unanimous court,
Madlanga J made the following findings of Mr Tjiroze –
10.1
In paragraph 1 – “
It
seems impolite and harsh to start a judgment by telling a litigant
that her or his cause must fail. But, if there ever was a
candidate
for that kind of opener, this is it. As will soon become clear, the
application for leave to appeal directly to this
Court is so woeful
as to cry out for dismissal. And that is an issue we could have dealt
with by summarily issuing an order without
writing a judgment. This
judgment has been necessitated by the question whether the applicant,
Mr Hitjevi Obafemi Tjiroze, must
pay the costs of the second
respondent, the Financial Sector Conduct Authority, on an attorney
and client scale.”
10.2
In paragraph 24 – “
The
applicant has been litigating frivolously and vexatiously at great
expense to the second respondent. In so doing, he has defamed
a
member of the Judiciary and gratuitously accused some individuals of
lying under oath without an iota of evidence in substantiation.”
10.3
In paragraph 25 – “
Ultimately,
the finality of the main application has been delayed. In the
process, the second respondent has been required to expend
considerable time and funds defending frivolous, prima facie
defamatory applications. And at the centre of all of this is the
applicant’s refusal to accept Senyatsi AJ’s order, which
did no more than to allow an amendment to a notice to oppose
the
applicant’s review application, so that the notice could
reflect the correct name of one of the respondents. Crucially,
that
name had been reflected incorrectly through undeniable inadvertence.”
10.4
In paragraph 26 – “
Despite
an assertion to the contrary by the applicant, the correction of the
name did not cause him any prejudice. This litigation,
which is
plainly vexatious, is but an attempt by the applicant to hold onto
what he misguidedly perceives to be an advantage. The
subtext is that
an amendment will result in him losing that advantage; and that is
what will cause him “prejudice”.
That, of course, has
never been our law on what constitutes prejudice of the nature that
may result in an amendment being denied.
Prejudice that may lead to
the refusal of an amendment is not about the mere loss of a
procedural advantage or even the possibility
of losing the case
itself as a result of the grant of the amendment. The norm is always
to grant an amendment if it will not cause
the other side an
injustice that is incapable of being compensated by appropriate award
of costs. Despite woefully falling short
of meeting that test, the
applicant has lamentably litigated all the way to this Court. That
calls for a showing of this Court’s
displeasure.”
10.5
In paragraph 27 –
“
Additionally, in all three applications
(including the one before this Court), the applicant has attempted to
attack the second
respondent’s opposition on the basis of minor
technicalities. This, purely to have the applications proceed
unopposed notwithstanding
the second respondent’s clear
intention to oppose all three applications. In doing so, the
applicant is abusing the court
process.”
10.6
In paragraph 28 – “
The
applicant, though self-represented, is a legal professional. As
such, he should understand the import of his allegations
and the
impact of his numerous nonsensical applications. In fact, he states
that he does understand the potentially defamatory
nature and weight
of his allegations against Senyatsi AJ
.”
11.
The Constitutional Court granted a
punitive costs order against Mr Tjiroze.
12.
In the founding affidavit in the
present main application Mr Tjiroze regrets and apologizes, at least
for some of his conduct in
the case before the Constitutional Court.
Mere regret and apology are not sufficient in the present case. They
ring hollow when
Mr Tjiroze makes the following statements, among
others in his replying affidavit in the present main application -
12.1
Paragraph 6 –
Speaking of the answering affidavit of Ms Keetse – “
The
respondent's entire answering affidavit stands to be struck out, as
being vexatious, frivolous, scandalous and containing narrative
reconstructions that do not assist the court in fairly and justly
adjudicating the admission application, rather than an attempt
to
show the applicant in a bad light to this Honourable Court on
subjective and carefully selected and para-phrased statements
and
conclusions
.”
12.2
Paragraph 12 –
“
I must lastly
hasten, in passing, to relate my observations of the Respondent's
answering affidavit. It is apparent that the Respondent's
answering
affidavit seeks to highlight selective events upon which to launch ad
hominem attacks. The respondent steers away from
the origin of its
cherry-picked events…”
12.3
In paragraph
13 – “
The
motive of such cherry-picking, it would seem, is to have this court
look upon the applicant as reckless, idiotic, unintelligent
in
matters of the law, disrespectful and out of control. Of course,
these false depictions of the applicant are far from the truth.
The
respondent loses complete perspective that, but for had applicant
never stood by his personal and professional ethics required
of a
corporate legal advisor and compliance officer, the aftermath events
cherry-picked by respondent would invariably never have
featured in
the applicant's life. This excluded and ignored genesis of events may
not mean much to the respondent, but the hope
is that they mean
something to this Court.”
12.4
In paragraph 35 –
“
It is unclear
why the respondent has elected to pull selected affidavits, as if the
applicant had failed to disclose the cases from
which the respondent
has gone to collect the carefully selected affidavits. I respectfully
submit, this is indicative of a substantive
bias on the part of the
LPC. The only purpose would be to accuse me of various forms of
misbehavior and mislead the court about
my moral and ethical
character holistically. The selected affidavits do not represent the
integrity and honest character of the
applicant, rather than
represent a party's case before court. It is not for the LPC to
dictate how individuals appearing in person
are to put their case
before court
. “
12.5
In paragraph
36 – “
The
respondent, blinded by its selectivity, omits to place before this
court extracts from affidavits in which applicant has triumphed,
such
as the recent Supreme Court of Appeal judgment dated 23 January in
which applicant was of the view that Majavu AJ misapplied
the law,
despite obvious and apparent case law having decided the aspects
submitted by applicant and that Majavu AJ may have been
influenced by
the fact that the applicant appeared in person before him against
famed senior counsels and arbitrarily disregarded
valid evidence and
submissions made by the applicant appearing in person. The Supreme
Court of Appeal on 23 January 2023 agreed
with applicant's views and
contentions and has set aside the judgments and orders of Majavu AJ,
and ordered that the appeal succeeds
is granted to the Full Bench of
this above Honourable Court. I attach the SCA ruling hereto marked
annexure "RA5".”
13.
Under
section
24(2)(c)
of the
Legal Practice Act, 28 of 2014
it is a requirement
for admission as a legal practitioner, as it was under the old
Admission of Advocates Act, 74 of 1964
that the applicant is fit and
proper to be so admitted. The conduct of Mr Tjiroze as set out above
leaves him well short of fulfilling
this requirement. The application
for admission fails on this ground.
14.
Regarding the
qualifications of Mr Tjiroze, he alleges that he qualifies for
admission under
section 115
of the
Legal Practice Act read
with
section 3(1)
of the old
Admission of Advocates Act. Section
115
preserves the admissibility of an applicant who qualified to be
admitted under the old Act before 1 November 2018. Under section
3(1)
of the old Act an applicant needs to show, among other things that he
or she is “
duly
qualified
.”
15.
Under section
3(2)(a)(ii) of the old Act, which is applicable here it is a
requirement for admission that the applicant “
has
satisfied all the requirements for a degree or degrees of a
university in a country which has been designated by the Minister,
after consultation with the General Council of the Bar of South
Africa, by notice in the Gazette, and in respect of which
a
university in the Republic with a faculty of law has certified that
the syllabus and standard of instruction are equal or superior
to
those required for the degree of baccalaureus legum of a
university in the Republic.”
16.
It is common cause that
Mr Tjiroze has a three year B Juris degree from the University of
Namibia. Mr Tjiroze needs to show that
Monash South Africa, being a
South African university with a law faculty, and on which institution
he relies, has certified that
the syllabus and standard of
instruction is equal to or superior to that of the South African LLB.
17.
The LPC and the JSA
accept that Mr Tjiroze has a degree from a country designated by the
Minister. The LPC argues that there is
no certification by a
university in the Republic with a faculty of law “
that
the syllabus and standard of instruction is equal to or superior to
those required for the degree of baccalaureus legum of
a university
in the Republic
.”
18.
Attached to Mr
Tjiroze’s founding affidavit is a document, apparently dated 20
August 2020 and issued by the South African
Qualifications Authority,
certifying that the B Juris degree of the University of Namibia has,
as its closest comparable South
African degree, the “
Bachelor
of Procurationis
“
degree. This latter degree is commonly known as a B Proc.
19.
Annexed to Mr Tjiroze’s
founding affidavit is one by Dr Mongalo. Dr Mongalo is an associate
professor of law at Wits University.
He used to be the head of the
law school at Monash. He left Monash at the end of October 2019. In
effect, Dr Mongalo says that
both he and Monash have concluded that
Mr Tjiroze qualifies. But this is not a certification by Monash. Dr
Mongalo does not purport
to speak for Monash. He does not say that he
has its authority to provide the required certification.
20.
Annexed to Dr Mongalo’s
affidavit is a letter, dated 22 July 2022 by Ms S Ferndale, the
Registrar of the Independent Institute
of Education, the successor in
title to Monash. Ms Ferndale says that Mr Tjiroze received certain
credits and was exempted from
some modules relating to Monash’s
“
2- year LLB
.”
The
high-water mark for Mr Tjiroze in this letter is the statement that
“
Mr Tjiroze
was deemed qualified on 06 December 2019 for conferment of the 2 year
LLB from Monash South Africa
.”
The letter does not state that “
the
syllabus and standard of instruction are equal or superior to those
required for the degree of baccalaureus legum of
a
university in the Republic.”
21.
The
letter implies the opposite of what is required. It implies that Mr
Tjiroze needed further tuition from Monash, over and above
that which
he received for his B Juris to be “
deemed
qualified
”
by Monash for its 2 year LLB.
22.
Mr Tjiroze is thus left
with a three year B Juris and a deeming qualification for a Monash 2
year LLB but he is left without a certification
from Monash that his
B Juris is of the required standard.
23.
Mr Tjiroze’s
application fails on the issue of qualification.
24.
Mr Tjiroze’s
conduct in the present matter, as set out above on the question of
fitness calls for punitive costs.
25.
At the outset of
the present hearing, Ms I Strydom for Mr Tjiroze did not proceed with
prayers 2 and 3 of the related application
of 17 November 2022. Mr
Tjiroze also did not proceed with a Rule 30 application. It was
expressly agreed by Ms Strydom for Mr Tjiroze,
Mr Groome for the LPC
and Mr Gilbert leading Mr Deeplal for the JSA that the JSA be joined
as a party. Accordingly, the JSA’s
intervention application
fell away apart from the question of its costs.
26.
The LPC seeks
costs only in the main application and in the urgent application of
17 November 2022, both on the attorney and client
scale.
27.
The JSA seeks
costs in the urgent application of 17 November 2022, its intervention
application and in the Rule 30 application on
the party and party
scale.
28.
I acknowledge the
helpful input made by Ms Keetse and Mr Seleka and the learned and
professional argument presented by Ms Strydom,
Mr Groome and Mr
Gilbert with Mr Deeplal.
ORDER
1.
The Johannesburg
Society of Advocates is joined as a party.
2.
The application by Mr
Tjiroze for admission as a legal practitioner, advocate is dismissed.
3.
The application dated
17 November 2022 is dismissed.
4.
Mr Tjiroze is to
pay the costs of the LPC in both the main application and the
17 November 2022 application on the attorney
and client scale.
5.
Mr Tjiroze is to pay
the costs of the JSA in the application of 17 November 2022, the
JSA’s application to intervene and in
the Rule 30 application
on the party and party scale.
GC Wright
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
I agree
L Wepener
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD : 10
August 2023
DELIVERED : 18
August 2023
APPEARANCES :
APPLICANT
Adv I Strydom
Instructed by
Attorney ER Hart
University of
Johannesburg Law Clinic
011 559 5194
eltonr@uj.ac.za
FIRST RESPONDENT
Att L Groome
079 346 7203
liamg@rwattorneys.co.za
Instructed by RW
Attorneys
012 452 4000
adeled@rwafrica.com
SECOND RESPONDENT
Adv B M Gilbert
083 853 3082
/ 011 263 9000
bmgilbert@group621.co.za
Adv N Deeplal
076 924 7592
/ 011 263 8900
nikhiel@deeplal.co.za
Instructed by Webber
Wentzel
Ms F
Jaffer
Faatimah.Jaffer@webberwentzel.com
011 530
5644
Victoria.campos@webberwentzel.com
Tobia.serongoane@webberwentzel.com
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