Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 479South Africa
Ramsay Webber Incorporated v Anastassopoulos (2020/30563) [2022] ZAGPJHC 479 (25 July 2022)
Headnotes
the principle established in Hershensohnn[7] namely, that an attorney is bound by his first bill delivered, however, the court recognised an exception thereto in circumstances where the client was informed that the bill which was being rendered was in effect a tentative bill that would be superseded by a bill prepared for the purpose of taxation, if taxation was required, and where the client did not object to the bill in its amended form, once received.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ramsay Webber Incorporated v Anastassopoulos (2020/30563) [2022] ZAGPJHC 479 (25 July 2022)
Ramsay Webber Incorporated v Anastassopoulos (2020/30563) [2022] ZAGPJHC 479 (25 July 2022)
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sino date 25 July 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
###
CASE
NO:
2020/30563
Reportable:
No
Of
interest to other Judges: No
Revised:
No
Date:25/07/2022
In
the matter between:
RAMSAY
WEBBER INCORPORATED
Plaintiff
and
PHILLIPA
ANASTASSOPOULOS
Defendant
J
U D G M E N T
MAIER-FRAWLEY
J:
1.
The plaintiff seeks provisional sentence
against the defendant for payment of an amount of R1,326 686.89
together with interest
and costs, in respect of professional legal
services rendered to the defendant and disbursements incurred by the
plaintiff on behalf
of the defendant during the subsistence of its
mandate.
2.
The claim is founded on a written mandate
concluded between the parties as well as a taxed bill of costs
containing the taxing master’s
allocatur. Both the mandate and
taxing master’s allocator are annexed to the summons. The
existence and authenticity of the
written mandate and of the taxing
master’s allocator is not in dispute on the papers.
Ex
facie
the summons, the plaintiff’s
claim is founded on a liquid document.
3.
It
is common cause that the defendant appointed the plaintiff as his
attorneys for purposes of obtaining legal advice and legal
representation in different legal matters. The attorney/client
relationship commenced in June 2017 and ended at the end of March
2019 when the defendant terminated the plaintiff’s mandate. It
is further common cause that the plaintiff invoiced the defendant
from time to time during the subsistence of the mandate for services
rendered by it to the defendant and disbursements incurred
by it on
the latter’s behalf. The defendant paid each invoice that was
presented to him up to the 28
th
January 2019. On 29 March 2019, the plaintiff rendered its final
statement of account (the ‘last bill’), which statement
reflected
inter
alia
all the various payments made by the defendant during the subsistence
of the mandate up to 28 January 201
9
(in aggregate totalling the sum of R2, 269 304.90), whilst 6
additional invoices
[1]
rendered
after that date (in aggregate totalling R730,423.50), remained due,
owing and unpaid.
4.
When
confronted with the last bill reflecting an amount of R730,423.50 as
outstanding, the defendant insisted upon the taxation
of the final
invoices so that the reasonableness of the charges levied as
reflected therein could be assessed. According to the
plaintiff, its
managing director, Mr Shawn Van Heerden, informed the defendant in
correspondence on 30 May 2019
[2]
that ‘
If
the bill of costs in respect of our charges is to be taxed at your
insistence, which I have no difficulty with, kindly be advised
that I
reserve Ramsay Webber’s rights to collect the higher amount
should, on taxation, the bill of costs
[be]
taxed
for more than the amount still due by you as reflected in the
statement of account.
’
The plaintiff thereupon prepared a revised or amended bill of costs
for taxation, raising charges for work performed and
disbursements
incurred since January 201
8
,
which charges amounted, in aggregate total, to a sum exceeding R2
million.
5.
Upon being granted a higher allocator in
respect of its revised bill of costs, the plaintiff now claims the
higher amount awarded
in terms of the allocatur (R1,963 059.33) less
amounts subsequently paid by the defendant (R636,372.44) for its
claim for payment
of the sum of R1,326 686.89 in these proceedings.
6.
The
defendant raised various defences in his opposing papers, however, at
the hearing of the matter, only one main defence was pursued,
which
is that the plaintiff was not, as a matter of law and fact, entitled
to redraw its bill of costs (and so replace its last
bill) for
purposes of taxation, there being no agreement between the parties
allowing the plaintiff to increase its charges in
an amended bill,
and further, on the basis that the contents of the revised bill
remained in dispute
[3]
for
reasons given in the opposing papers where various anomalies in the
revised bill were demonstrated.
7.
The defendant thus contends that the
central question arising for determination is whether a firm of
attorneys can, after its mandate
is terminated, redraw its bill of
costs for purposes of taxation by the taxing master and charge its
client an additional amount
that is far in excess of the amount that
had been charged and invoiced to its client at the time of
termination of the plaintiff’s
mandate.
8.
According
to the plaintiff, the defendant did not raise the notion that it was
precluded from reserving its right to demand payment
of whatever the
process of taxation would indicate. The defendant’s version is
that the plaintiff was not entitled to have
claimed more than he was
entitled to claim under the written mandate
[4]
or to draw up a different bill for purposes of taxation in order to
recover more than that which was originally billed. In this
regard,
the defendant avers that
‘
the
plaintiff had not, in either the agreement
[written mandate]
or
the
[final]
invoices,
established and/or reserved for itself the right to charge a higher
amount than it had invoiced (or any higher amount)
in the event of
[the respondent]
terminating
its mandate and/or insisting upon taxation’
and
that ‘
such
taxation of the bill as may have taken place pertained to only the
fees reflected therein, and not to the presence or absence
of
underlying contractual (or other) liability to make payment of the
fees contained therein and, as such, the bill is not determinative
of
my liability towards the plaintiff
.’
[5]
9.
The
plaintiff relies on
Hathorn
[6]
as
authority for its contention that it was permissible for it to have
prepared a revised bill for taxation as the defendant had
been
informed that a different bill would be prepared for taxation and the
defendant had not at the time (or subsequently at taxation)
raised
any objection to the bill in its amended form, which exceeded the
amount at which it was originally rendered.
10.
Hathorn
upheld
the principle established in
Hershensohnn
[7]
namely
,
that
an attorney is bound by his first bill delivered, however, the court
recognised an exception thereto in circumstances where
the
client was informed that the bill which was being rendered was in
effect a tentative bill that would be superseded by a bill
prepared
for the purpose of taxation, if taxation was required, and where the
client did not object to the bill in its amended
form, once received.
11.
Counsel for the defendant argued at the
hearing of the matter that the facts in
Hathorn
are distinguishable from the facts
in
casu.
In
Hathorn
,
the attorney
had
delivered a bill of costs to his client, the respondent, which
consisted of fees and disbursements, and had informed the respondent
that he was prepared to reduce to the sum of 33 guineas, the items
shown on the bill as being due for fees, but that if the respondent
desired to avail himself of his right to have the bill taxed it would
have to be redrawn for that purpose and must be returned.
The
respondent returned the bill with a request for taxation.
12.
The
facts in the present matter reveal that on 29 March 2019 the
plaintiff rendered its last bill reflecting an amount owing in
terms
of its final invoices raised during January 2019, February 2019 and
March 2019, without any qualification or any reservation
of its right
to amend the bill should taxation be required, having accompanied the
last bill. Thereafter, on 30 May 2019 the plaintiff
ex
post facto
reserved its right to ‘
charge
the higher amount should its bill of costs be taxed at a higher
amount.
’
[8]
13.
I
agree with counsel for the defendant that the facts
in
casu
are
not aligned with the facts in
Hathorn.
The
plaintiff’s reservation of rights as recorded in its letter of
30 May 2019,
contains
no express intimation that a different bill would be prepared for
taxation (based on different rates than those permitted
in terms of
the written mandate)
[9]
nor was
the last bill (presented on 29 March 2019) stated to be a tentative
bill which would be amended and increased should the
respondent
insist on taxation. Rather, the implicit intimation
ex
post facto
was that a different bill would be prepared
because
the respondent had insisted on taxation.
As
a matter of fact and law therefore, the exceptional circumstance
recognised in
Hathorn
do
not find application on the facts of this matter. In my view, the
probability of success in the principal case on the respondent’s
central defence (relating to the plaintiff’s entitlement to
present a revised bill for taxation and the defendant’s
concomitant liability to pay for increased charges levied therein, as
taxed) has been shown to be against the plaintiff.
[10]
This conclusion is fortified by facts demonstrated both during
argument and in the opposing papers to the effect that, contrary
to
the plaintiff’s allegation that the revised bill had been
prepared based on the contents of the final invoices, the revised
bill did not accord with the contents of the final invoices in all
respects.
14.
It
was argued on behalf of the plaintiff at the hearing of the matter
that by virtue of the failure by the defendant’s cost
consultant to raise any objections to the revised bill or its
contents at the taxation, the amount of which had been settled by
agreement between the parties’ respective cost consultants, the
defendant should be taken to have acquiesced, by silence,
to the
basis upon which the revised bill had been drawn and the agreed
amount as endorsed on taxation.
[11]
In
riposte
,
counsel for the defendant argued that no case had been made out in
the papers for a finding that the defendant had agreed to assume
the
risk of paying a higher amount on taxation by way of acquiescence by
silence. I am inclined to agree. All the plaintiff had
pleaded in its
replying affidavit was that
the
defendant did not raise the notion that it was precluded from
‘reserving its right to demand payment of whatever the process
of taxation would indicate.’
That is a far cry from pleading (or establishing) that the defendant
had failed to object to the plaintiff redrawing its last bill
on an
agreed basis which included (i) a redrawing of the bill without
limitation to the entries appearing on the final invoices
and (ii) on
the basis that the original bill rendered was merely tentative. On
the plaintiff’s own version, it had mandated
its cost
consultant to draw a bill of cost based on the scale as between
attorney and own client ‘
limited
to the entries that appeared on the final invoices,
’
however, as the defendant demonstrated in his opposing papers, the
revised bill as drawn did not in fact correlate with
the entries
appearing on the invoices.
15.
There
is no dispute between the parties that the taxing master’s
function is to determine the amount of the liability,
assuming
that liability exists.
[12]
It
is not the function of the taxing master to decide whether a party is
liable to another party, whether in terms of a written
mandate or in
in terms of the common law. I have already found that the facts
peculiar to this matter do not appear to me to support
a finding that
the plaintiff was entitled to redraw its bill reflecting increased
charges and to present such bill for taxation.
In terms of the
relevant authorities, this carries the consequence that the defendant
could legally and factually resist liability
for the increased
aggregate total amount appearing therein, notwithstanding taxation
thereof. The papers do not suggest that either
the parties’
respective cost consultants or the taxing master considered the
question of the legality of the revised bill
but rather assumed the
existence of the defendant’s liability in relation thereto.
16.
Accordingly, it follows that provisional
sentence must be refused and the defendant must be allowed to enter
the principal case
to pursue its defences untrammelled by having to
pay the amount claimed upfront. The general rule is that costs on the
party and
party scale would ordinarily follow the result. The
defendant seeks a punitive costs order on the basis that the
plaintiff employed
abusive tactics in its flagrant pursuit of an
untenable claim. I do not agree. Although it is true that the court
Hershensohnn
cautioned against allowing an attorney
as
a matter of course, when he is met with a demand for taxation, to
withdraw his original bill and substitute another, stating
that this
would open the door to abuse. The court however went on to say that
‘
It
may be that in special circumstances the rule may be departed from
and amendment allowed. What these special circumstances may
be and
what procedure they may entail are matters which do not arise in this
application
.’
In my view, the plaintiff pursued an argument for the grant of
provisional sentence based on a genuine belief that the
facts of this
matter were such as to warrant a departure from the general rule
enunciated in
Hershensohnn,
precisely because it considered the facts of this matter to be
similar to the facts that were found in
Hathorn
to
constitute such a special circumstance. I cannot lose sight of the
fact that the plaintiff was put to the expense of having to
counter
various additional defences raised by the defendant in his opposing
papers, but which were not pursued at the hearing of
this matter. In
these circumstances, I do not think it would be fair or just to
impose a punitive order for costs.
17.
Accordingly, the following order is
granted:
ORDER:
1.
Provisional sentence is refused with costs.
AVRILLE
MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
10 May 2022
Judgment
delivered
25 July 2022
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be have been at 10h00 on 25 July 2022.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for Plaintiff:
Adv HM Viljoen
Attorneys
for Plaintiff:
Ramsay
Webber Inc Attorneys
Counsel
for defendant
Adv HP Van
Nieuwenhuizen
(Heads
of argument prepared by Adv DS Dodge)
Attorneys
for defendant
Steve Merchak Attorneys
[1]
The
additional invoices are also referred to as the ‘final
invoices’ in the papers and contained
inter
alia
charges
for fees levied and disbursements incurred more than a year prior
but which had not previously been billed.
[2]
See
par 3 of Annexure ‘A3’ at p001-120.
[3]
The
dispute regarding the contents of the bill concerned the fact that
the bill drawn for taxation purposes was
inter
alia
not
prepared in accordance with the terms of the written mandate that
provided for work undertaken by the plaintiff to be charged
as a
time-based attendance as opposed to a tariff based folio basis, as
was done. Such bill also did not reflect certain payments
that had
previously made by the defendant and as demonstrated in the
answering papers did not correlate with the contents of
the final
invoices in certain respects. In short,
various
anomalies in the revised bill were pointed out in the defendant’s
opposing papers, such as to impugn the correctness
of the amounts
charged therein.
[4]
In
terms of the written mandate, the parties agreed that the
plaintiff’s agreed rates would increase on an annual basis
subject to notice. The mandate further contains a no variation
clause prohibiting changes thereto in the absence of written
agreement by the parties. As no written variation agreement was
concluded, no increased rates could be billed.
[5]
See
paras 29.3 and 29.5 of the opposing affidavit. See too para 32 of
the answering affidavit, where the defendant alleges that
“
The
plaintiff's espoused version is that it offered discounts during the
matter (evidenced by, inter alia, the plaintiff's correspondence
of
30 May 2019, a copy of which is annexure "A3" hereto). To
the extent that such discounts were offered, it was never
a term
thereof (or of the agreement) that they were liable to be, or
capable of being, reversed on either the termination of
the
plaintiff's mandate or my requiring that the bill be taxed and I
certainly never agreed thereto.”
[6]
Hathorn
v Barton
(1922)
43 NPD 504
[7]
Hershensohnn
v Martens
1915
NPD. In this case the court considered whether
an
attorney
is
entitled to substitute a bill prepared for taxation for an account
not prepared with a view to taxation, and whether such substituted
bill is the bill which should be taxed.
Dove
Wilson JP held that “
To hold that where a solicitor has
delivered his bill, he may, as a matter of course, when he is met
with a demand for taxation,
withdraw that bill and substitute
another, would be, I think, to open the door to abuse.
The
rule must be that he is bound by his bill as delivered
.
It may be that in special circumstances the rule may be
departed from and amendment allowed.
What these special
circumstances may be and what procedure they may entail are matters
which do not arise in this application.”
In
a concurring judgment, Broome J held that “
The case of
Baker & Laughton v Bond
(7 NLR 206)
is at any rate authority for
this, that when a later and larger bill has been substituted for an
earlier and smaller bill for
taxation as against a client, the
amount to be allowed in the result is to be no more than that
originally claimed and sued for
. Upon the ground
suggested by the JUDGE PRESIDENT I agree that it would be dangerous
to hold that a bill of costs can be withdrawn
and another and a
larger bill submitted for taxation as claimed in this application.”
(emphasis added)
[8]
See
par 19 of the replying affidavit.
[9]
In
terms of the written mandate, the parties agreed that the
plaintiff’s agreed rates set out therein would increase on
an
annual basis subject to notice being given to the client. The
mandate further contains a non-variation clause that prohibits
variations in the absence of written agreement between the parties.
The papers are silent about whether any notice of increased
rates
was given to the respondent, and no written variation to the mandate
was produced in these proceedings. The plaintiff was
not thus
entitled to raise charges at rates other than those reflected in the
mandate in its bill of costs.
[10]
See
Twee
Jonge Gezellen (Pty) Ltd and Another v Land and Agricultural
Development Bank of South Africa t/a the Land Bank and Another
2011 (3) SA 1
(CC) at par 21.
[11]
It
is not in dispute that the parties’ respective cost
consultants had agreed on the amounts depicted in the bill after
making certain deductions therefrom, however there is a dispute
between them as to whether or not the defendant’s cost
consultant (Gertzen) had been misinformed and misled by a
misrepresentation made by the plaintiff’s cost consultant (Van
Dyke) as to the extent of the charges raised in the final invoices
and thus the extent of the defendant’s liability for
the
amount depicted in the revised bill, which, as is common cause, was
about three times more than the amount depicted as owing
by the
defendant in the final invoices. According to Gertzen,
notwithstanding that he had pointed out that the bill was
inconsistent
with the written mandate, Ms Van Dyk (his counterpart)
represented to him that the bill hac nevertheless been drafted for
an
amount that was substantially less than that which was
purportedly still due and owing by the defendant. Moreover, on
Gertzen’s
version, he was not permitted by Ms van Dyk, to
peruse the plaintiff’s files. Needless to say, Gertzen’s
version
of the events is disputed by the plaintiff.Ultimately, the
trial court in the principal matter will have to determine this
dispute
by considering the credibility of these witnesses. It also
appears that Gertzen and his counterpart may have been unaware that
the legal basis for the revised bill was questionable.
[12]
See
Martens
v Rand share and Broking Finance Corporation (Pty) Ltd
1939
WLD 159
at 165.
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