Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1076South Africa
Ramulifho v Groundup News NPC and Others (20150/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1076 (27 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ramulifho v Groundup News NPC and Others (20150/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1076 (27 September 2023)
Ramulifho v Groundup News NPC and Others (20150/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1076 (27 September 2023)
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sino date 27 September 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 20150/2021
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
27.09.23
In the matter between:
LESLEY NKHUMBULENI
RAMULIFHO
Applicant
And
GROUNDUP
NEWS NPC
First
Respondent
NATHAN
GEFFEN
Second
Respondent
RAYMOND
JOSEPH
Third
Respondent
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Fourth
Respondent
CHAIRPERSON OF THE
SOUTH AFRICAN
LEGAL
PRACTICE COUNCIL
Fifth
Respondent
MR Y MAYET
Sixth
Respondent
GAUTENG PROVINCIAL
LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Seventh
Respondent
JUDGMENT
YACOOB
J
:
1.
The applicant, Mr
Ramulifho, seeks leave to appeal the judgment of this court handed
down on 24 May 2023, reviewing setting aside
a decision of the fourth
respondent the LPC which dismissed a complaint against Mr Ramulifho,
and remitting the complaint back
to the LPC to carry out a proper
investigation. The second and third respondents, Mr Geffen and Mr
Joseph, were the complainants
before the LPC, and they, together with
the first respondent, GroundUp, were the applicants in the review
application.
2.
The parties agreed that
they would submit written argument and that the application for leave
should be determined without oral
argument, unless I determined that
oral argument was necessary after reading the written submissions.
The application for
leave is therefore dealt with without oral
argument.
3.
The grounds of appeal
are, essentially, that the court was wrong in every finding. Even
though four main grounds are identified,
Under each heading in the
notice of application for leave to appeal there are assertions that
the court erred in every finding
or conclusion.
4.
I do not propose to go
through each of the assertions. The judgment stands for itself and I
am satisfied that, in the main, there
is no merit in the numerous
assertions that the court erred.
5.
The notice correctly
brings to my notice one factual error that I made in the judgment.
That is, that the applicant acted as his
own attorney in the
application against GroundUp to have articles removed from GroundUp’s
website. This was an error that
crept in, for which I apologise. It
is correct that the applicant’s firm was a co-applicant and
that another firm represented
them. However, I do not consider that
that error results in any change to the outcome.
6.
Even though the error
resulted in an impression that the conduct complained of was done in
the applicant’s capacity as an
attorney, that was not the case
brought by the respondents, nor was it the basis of this courts
finding. The conduct complained
of still raises the question of
honesty and integrity of an officer of the court in court
proceedings. There cannot be two standards
of honesty for an officer
of the court, one where he is litigant in his own capacity and one
where he litigates in his capacity
as an attorney. Legal
representatives are individuals, and for the courts and the public to
be able to rely on them their honesty
must stand up to examination on
every level.
7.
The written submissions
go into the merits of the complaint, which are not before the court,
in great detail. To the extent that
the leave to appeal relies on the
merits of the complaint, I do not consider those grounds, as the
merits are not before me and
I did not consider them.
8.
The first ground
of appeal is that, having found that the second and third respondents
(who were applicants in the main application)
had
locus
standi
, I did not
consider whether the first respondent (applicant) had
locus
standi
. This, the
applicant submits, is an error because the applicant is now ordered
to pay the costs of the first respondent when the
application against
the first respondent should have been dismissed.
9.
I do not consider that
this ground is sufficient on its own to found an appeal. It does not
change the outcome, and the main application
would not have been
substantively different had the first respondent not been involved.
The only costs would have been those occasioned
by the applicant
raising this point. And the only consequence of the finding is costs
related. It is trite that leave to appeal
a costs order is not
generally granted.
10.
However, if I find
merit in the other grounds then the applicant may obviously pursue
the appeal on this point too.
11.
The second ground
of appeal identified by Mr Ramulifho is that there are investigations
pending in other fora, in particular, that
the second and third
respondents have laid charges against him. He argues now in the
application for leave that his right to self-incrimination
may be
impacted if he is compelled to produce documents. That may be so.
However, if that happens, Mr Ramulifho may well, if the
criminal
investigation is proceeding, decline to produce documents on that
basis. This does not preclude the LPC from investigating,
and as
pointed out in the founding affidavit, the investigation could also
include obtaining information from other people.
12.
The issue here is the
protection of the public from a potentially dishonest legal
practitioner, and that has to be an extremely
high priority. It is
not enough to await the outcome, if any, of a criminal investigation.
If Mr Ramulifho claims protection of
his rights in terms of section
35 of the Constitution, that can be dealt with in due course. Legal
practitioners who may be subject
to criminal investigations cannot
prevent the Legal Practice Council from acting simply because those
investigations are pending.
There is no merit in the second
identified ground of appeal
13.
The third identified
ground is that the complaint was incompetent, based on hearsay,
conjecture and unsupported opinion, and therefore
that there was not
even a
prima facie
case. The
main basis on which this ground is founded is that, where there is
only hearsay, conjecture and unsupported opinion,
the LPC cannot be
expected to expend its resources on further investigations. For the
reasons contained in the main judgment, I
am not satisfied that
another court would have come to a different conclusion on this
issue.
14.
The applicant
mistakenly relies on the allegations that the complaint was based on
hearsay, conjecture and unsupported opinion to
assert that the
founding affidavit also contained hearsay, conjecture and unsupported
opinion and therefore that there was no undisputed
version before me.
Taking into account that I did not deal with the merits, and the only
“version” I was considering
was the nature of the
complaint and the manner it was dealt with, there is clearly no merit
to this assertion.
15.
The final identified
ground is that there is an internal remedy available to the
respondents, and that the court should have stayed
proceedings and
directed the respondents to approach the LPC Appeal Tribunal. There
was no internal remedy available at the time
the review was
instituted. Directing the respondents to approach the Appeal Tribunal
after the application was already heard would
not, in my view, have
been in the interests of justice nor do I consider that another court
would find differently in the circumstances
of this case. The
applicant chose not to put facts before the court which may result in
the court exercising its discretion in
his favour, on this point or
any other, and bears the consequence of that choice.
16.
I am therefore
not satisfied that the applicant has established that another court
would come to a different conclusion. There is
some suggestion in the
written submissions that, because the functions of the Legal Practice
Council require new legislation to
be considered and new legal points
to be established, leave should be granted. I do not consider that
this is the case in which
that should be done, especially since none
of the principles set out in the main judgment are especially novel.
17.
I make the following
order:
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs.
S. YACOOB
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel for the
applicant:
N Ferreira and I Cloete
Instructed by:
Lionel Murray
Schwormstedt & Louw
Counsel for the fifth
respondent:
R Schoeman
Instructed by:
Elliot Attorneys Inc
Date of judgment:
27 September 2023
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