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[1998] ZACC 12
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De Freitas and Another v Society of Advocates of Natal (Natal Law Society Intervening) (CCT2/98) [1998] ZACC 12; 1998 (11) BCLR 1345 (15 September 1998)
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CONSTITUTIONAL COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT 2/98
JOAQUIM AUGUSTO DE FREITASÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
First
Applicant
INDEPENDENT ASSOCIATION OF
ADVOCATESÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
OF SOUTH AFRICAÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
          Â
Second Applicant      Â
versus
THE SOCIETY OF ADVOCATES
OF NATALÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
Respondent
THE NATAL LAW SOCIETYÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
Intervening
Party
Heard on         :          21 May 1998
Decided on      :          15 September 1998
JUDGMENT
LANGA DP:
[1]
           This is an application for leave to appeal directly
to this Court against the order of a full bench of the
Natal High Court:
[1]
(i) Â Â Â Â Â Â Â suspending the first applicant from practice as an
advocate for a period of six months, in consequence of
a finding by the High
Court that he was
guilty of unprofessional conduct in that, contrary to
the so-called âreferral ruleâ
,
he accepted work direct from members of the public without the
intervention of an attorney; and
  (ii)     dismissing the second applicantâs counter-application in
which the High Court was requested to make an order
declaring, in effect, that
advocates who are members of the second applicant, and not of the respondent,
are not bound by the referral
rule and are therefore entitled to accept work
direct from the public without the intervention of an attorney.
[2]
           The matter had its origins in the
High Court in an application by the respondent in September 1996 to strike
off
the first applicant from the roll of advocates. The second applicant and the
Natal Law Society (the intervening party) sought
and were granted leave to
intervene in those proceedings. The second applicantâs counter-application was
launched in April 1997.
[3]
           The present application is concerned
with two issues. The first is the constitutionality of section 7(2)
of the
Admission of Advocates Act
[2]
(the Advocatesâ Act) in so far as it entitles the respondent to initiate
proceedings of a disciplinary nature against an advocate
who is not one of its
members. The second issue is whether the referral rule, which prohibits an
advocate from accepting work direct
from the public without the intervention of
an attorney, is an unconstitutional infringement of the advocateâs right to
practise
a profession.
[4]
           Before application for leave to
appeal was made to this Court, applicants approached the High Court for a
certificate
under rule 18 of the Rules of the Constitutional Court.
[3]
Under rule 18(e), the High
Court was required to certify whether, in respect of each of the issues -
â(i)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â the constitutional issue is one of substance on which a
ruling by the Court is desirable; and
(ii)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â the
evidence in the proceedings is sufficient to enable the Court to deal with and
dispose of the
matter without having to refer the case back to the division
concerned for further evidence; and
(iii)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â there is a reasonable prospect that
the Court will reverse or materially alter the decision given
by the division
concerned if permission to bring the appeal is given . . . .â
[5]
        With regard to the first issue, the
High Court unanimously refused to give a positive certificate in respect of
rule
18(e)(i) and 18(e)(iii) but certified positively in respect of 18(e)(ii).Â
More specifically, the High Court held that the first
issue was not a point of
substance upon which a ruling by the Constitutional Court was desirable. The
second issue elicited a negative
certificate from the majority of the court
(Thirion J dissenting) in respect of all three aspects of rule 18(e). It will
be convenient
to deal with each of the disputed issues separately.
The first issue
[6]
        The applicantsâ first challenge relates
to the constitutionality of section 7(2) of the Advocatesâ Act which
provides
as follows:
âSubject to
the provisions of any other law, an application under paragraph (a), (b), (c)
or (d) of subsection (1) for the suspension
of any person from practice as an
advocate or for the striking off of the name of any person from the roll of
advocates may be made
by the General Council of the Bar of South Africa or by
the Bar Council or the Society of Advocates for the division which made the
order for his or her admission to practise as an advocate or where such person
usually practises as an advocate or is ordinarily
resident, and, in the case of
an application made to a division under paragraph (c) of subsection (1), also
by the State Attorney
referred to in the State Attorney Act, 1957 (Act No. 56
of 1957).â
[7]
        When the matter was argued in this Court, it
was not in dispute that the Society of Advocates of Natal, the respondent,
was
in general competent under the section to bring this type of application. What
was put in issue by the applicants was the constitutional
validity of a
provision empowering the respondent to bring disciplinary proceedings against
an advocate who was not one of its members.
[8]
        The broad submission by the applicants
in their written argument was that section 7(2) of the Advocatesâ Act âwas
promulgated prior to the Constitution and cognisance was at that time and in
current times as well, not taken of the constitutional
rights of parties
threatened with suspension or removal from the roll of advocates.â There was
no amplification of this submission
in the written argument of the applicants.Â
When pressed in argument to identify the constitutional rights of advocates
that were
infringed by section 7(2), counsel for the applicants contended that
the section discriminated against advocates who were not members
of the
respondent. He was however unable to sustain this argument or to identify any
other constitutional right which could be
said to have been infringed. The
applicants suggested that the infringement lay in the fact that the section
grants the respondent
jurisdiction over advocates who are not its members.Â
This is not correct. The section does not grant the respondent âjurisdictionâ
over non-members. What it does is to give the respondent standing to apply to
court for an advocate to be disciplined. The disciplinary
powers are exercised
by the court and not the respondent.
[9]
        All three judges in the High Court
agreed that there was no substance in the argument that section 7(2) was
inconsistent
with the Constitution. The standing of the respondent to bring
disciplinary matters to the attention of the court did not depend
upon section
7(2). Prior to the enactment of the section the courts had recognised the
standing of a society of advocates to initiate
proceedings before it for the
disciplining of an advocate, including an advocate who was not a member of the
society.
[4]
Â
It had also recognised the standing of the Attorney-General,
[5]
and in one case, of the State
Attorney.
[6]
Â
As Hugo J pointed out in his judgment on the application for a certificate in
terms of rule 18, the fact that the respondent is
given standing by section
7(2) to bring disciplinary matters to the attention of the court does not
necessarily mean that other interested
bodies may not do so as well. If the
second applicant wishes to assert such a right of standing, the time for it to
do so is when
the occasion for such application arises. It cannot, however,
object to the standing of the respondent which has long been recognised
by the
courts, and does not depend upon the provisions of section 7(2).
[10]
        As the applicants have been unable to identify any
constitutional right infringed by section 7(2) and there does
not appear to me
to be any, they do not have any prospect of success on this issue. In the
circumstances, their application for
leave to appeal on this issue must fail.
The second issue
[11]
        The second issue concerns a challenge
to the constitutionality of the referral rule. The contentions of the
applicants
may be summarised as follows. Whilst the effect of the Right of
Appearance in Courts Act,
[7]
is to accord to some attorneys the right of appearance in all courts, advocates
are prevented by the referral rule from accepting
work directly from the public
without the intervention of an attorney. The legislation thus places attorneys
in competition with
advocates. Because the rule obliges an advocate to rely on
a competitor for work, it constitutes a violation of an advocateâs
constitutional right to practise his or her profession. Applicants claimed
that the referral rule was an infringement of sections
22
[8]
and 39(3)
[9]
of the 1996 Constitution.
[10]
[12]
        The question whether the referral rule
constitutes an infringement of an advocateâs constitutional right to practise
his or her profession was first raised by the first applicant in his response
to the application brought against him by the respondent.Â
That application was
launched before the 1996 Constitution came into force.
[11]
 First applicant contended
that the referral rule was not binding on him as it was a rule of the
respondent, a body of which he
was not a member. The second applicantâs
counter-application, launched in April 1997, was for an order declaring that
advocates,
alternatively those who were members of the second applicant, had
the right to accept instructions from the public without the intervention
of an
attorney.
[13]
        In directions given by the President of
the Court, the parties were asked to address in their argument the question
whether the Constitutional Court has jurisdiction to hear an appeal in this
matter and if so, whether the Supreme Court of Appeal
(SCA) also has such
jurisdiction. Secondly, if both the Constitutional Court and the SCA have
jurisdiction, whether this is a matter
in which the appeal should be noted directly
to the Constitutional Court. This raises the question of the respective
jurisdictions
of this Court on the one hand and the SCA on the other, as well
as the question whether the interim Constitution
[12]
or the 1996 Constitution
applies.
[14]
        Under the interim Constitution, the
Appellate Division
[13]
had âno jurisdiction to adjudicate any matter within the jurisdiction of the
Constitutional Court.â
[14]
Â
It is not necessary to deal with the question whether, under the interim
Constitution, a challenge to the referral rule is a matter
over which this
Court has jurisdiction. The SCA now has jurisdiction under the 1996
Constitution to âdecide appeals in any matter.Â
It is the highest court of
appeal except in constitutional mattersâ.
[15]
[15]
        The High Court held that the 1996 Constitution was
applicable to the counter-application as it was the Constitution
in force when
the second applicant intervened. With regard to the first applicant, the High
Court invoked the provisions of item
17 of schedule 6 of the 1996 Constitution
which provide that -
 â. . . proceedings which
were pending before a court when the new Constitution took effect, must be
disposed of as if the new
Constitution had not been enacted, unless the
interests of justice require otherwise.â
Â
The High Court ruled that the
interests of justice did require the application of the 1996 Constitution to
the first applicantâs
case.
[16]
        The applicants presented their argument
in this Court on the basis that the 1996 Constitution was applicable and
that
both this Court and the SCA consequently have jurisdiction to hear the appeal.Â
They contended, however, that since an enquiry
relating to the
constitutionality of the referral rule is a constitutional matter over which
this Court has final jurisdiction, it
is this Court and not the SCA which is
the appropriate forum to deal with the appeal and that it should therefore
exercise its discretion
to hear the matter directly.
[17]
        In an application for leave to appeal
directly to this Court from a decision of the High Court, it is not sufficient
for an applicant merely to establish that an issue is a constitutional matter.Â
It is necessary to demonstrate the existence of
factors which would justify an
appeal being noted directly to this Court. In this regard, applicants relied
on section 167(6) of
the 1996 Constitution which provides:
âNational legislation or
the rules of the Constitutional Court must allow a person, when it is in the
interests of justice and with
leave of the Constitutional Court -
  (a)       to bring a
matter directly to the Constitutional Court; or
  (b)       to appeal
directly to the Constitutional Court from any other court.â
           The
effect of section 167(6) was considered by this Court in
S v Pennington and
Another
,
[16]
before the passing of the relevant national legislation and the promulgation of
the new rules.
[17]
 Writing for the Court,
Chaskalson P stated:
âSection 167(6) makes
clear that the Constitutional Court is to have both original and appellate
jurisdiction, and the power to
control access to it by granting âleaveâ only in
cases where it is in the interests of justice to do so.â
[18]
He stated further:
âLeave of this Court is a
requirement prescribed by section 167(6). Section 173 of the Constitution
allows this Court to âprotect
and regulate [its] own processâ. âLeave to
appealâ is also a requirement needed to âprotectâ the process of this Court
against abuse by appeals which have no merit, and it is in the âinterests of
justiceâ that this requirement be imposed . . .
.â
[19]
[18]
        The applicants argued that, having
regard to the existence of a number of factors, it was in the interests of
justice
that the appeal be heard directly by this Court and that leave should
therefore be granted. They submitted that the matter was
one of urgency
because the issue affects the livelihood of some 300 advocates who are members
of the second applicant who would be
disadvantaged by being forced to operate
in terms of the referral rule until the final resolution of the matter. Â They
argued further
that the matter has far-reaching implications for the general
public who would, so it was contended, benefit from reduced litigation
costs
should a ruling in favour of the applicants be obtained. I mention in passing
that the validity of this contention was rejected
by the High Court in its
judgment on the main application
[20]
and also in both the majority and minority judgments on the application for the
rule 18 certificate in this matter.
[21]
Â
The third factor mentioned by the applicants concerned costs of litigation in
the proceedings on appeal. It was argued that since
this Court has final
appellate jurisdiction in constitutional matters, the costs in this matter
would be considerably reduced if
the appeal were to be dealt with directly by
this Court without it first having to be argued before the SCA.
           There is
no doubt that time, costs and public importance are important considerations.Â
As this Court pointed
out in the matter of
Member of the Executive Council
for Development Planning and Local Government in the Provincial Government of Gauteng
v Democratic
Party and Others
,
[22]
they are however -
â . . . not
the only factors that have to be taken into account in deciding what is in the
interests of justice in any given case.Â
There may be cases where the nature of
the dispute is such that it would be appropriate for the SCA to consider the
matter before
it comes to this Court, and in the interests of justice for it to
do so.â
[23]
[19]
        In considering the question whether it is in the
interests of justice that this Court
should
exercise its jurisdiction directly, in a matter in which the SCA also has
jurisdiction, it is also relevant to have regard
to the nature of the issue
concerned. In
Amod v Multilateral Motor Vehicle Accidents Fund
,
[24]
in
a constitutional matter which involved the development of the common law,
Chaskalson
P, writing for the Court, stated:
âWhen a constitutional matter is one which turns on the direct
application of the Constitution and which does not involve the development
of
the common law, considerations of costs and time may make it desirable that the
appeal be brought directly to this Court. But
when the constitutional matter
involves the development of the common law, the position is different. The
Supreme Court of Appeal
has jurisdiction to develop the common law in all
matters including constitutional matters. Because of the breadth of its
jurisdiction
and its expertise in the common law, its views as to whether the
common law should or should not be developed in a âconstitutional
matterâ are
of particular importance. Assuming . . . that this Courtâs jurisdiction to
develop the common law in constitutional
matters is no different to that of the
Supreme Court of Appeal, it is a jurisdiction which ought not ordinarily to be
exercised without
the matter having first been dealt with by the Supreme Court
of Appeal.â
[25]
           The
referral rule is described by Hugo J, in his judgment on the rule 18(e)
application, as a rule of the common
law.
[26]
Â
Thirion J, after undertaking an exhaustive review of its history and
development, makes the point that the rule -
â . . .
reflects an existing
practice of long standing and on the strength of which court procedure has been
arranged and on the strength
of which the Legislature has made a distinction
between the positions of advocate and attorney.
â
[27]
[20]
        It is therefore clear that the second
issue is concerned with a rule of conduct which has been held by the courts
to
be applicable to members of the advocatesâ profession. The regulation of the
legal profession and deciding on the fitness
of members of that profession to
practise is a matter in respect of which all the divisions of the Supreme
Court, which have now
become the SCA and the High Courts, have always exercised
their inherent jurisdiction under the common law.
[28]
 It is a matter pre-eminently
for the SCA to determine, and it would not ordinarily be appropriate for this
Court to deal with such
an issue as a constitutional matter without knowing the
views of the SCA on the issues that have been raised. Because of the nature
of
the dispute in the present case, it is appropriate that the appeal be to the
SCA and not to this Court.
[21]
        I express no view on the merits of the appeal or on the
question whether or not there are reasonable prospects of
success on appeal or
on the correctness or otherwise of
the
High Courtâs decision to apply the 1996 Constitution rather than the interim
Constitution.
[29]
Â
These are matters for the court hearing the appeal or the application for leave
to appeal to decide, should this matter go further.
[30]
[22]
        My conclusion would be no different if
the issues were to be dealt with under the interim Constitution rather than
the
1996 Constitution. It is clear that the Appellate Division had the
jurisdiction under the interim Constitution to develop the
common law in
accordance with the provisions of section 35(3).
[31]
 As pointed out in
Amod
:
[32]
âThe Supreme
Court of Appeal has always had an inherent jurisdiction to develop the common
law to meet the needs of a changing society.Â
The circumstances in which it
elects to do so and the manner in which it develops the law form part of this
jurisdiction. With
the coming into force of the interim Constitution, and
later the 1996 Constitution, this power must now be exercised in accordance
with the âspirit, purport and objectsâ of the Bill of Rights.â
[33]
[23]
        It follows therefore that the
applicants have not established that the interests of justice require this
Court to
exercise its jurisdiction to hear the appeal in this matter directly,
to the exclusion of the SCA. The application for leave to
appeal to this Court
on the second issue must therefore be refused.
Costs
[24]
        The High Court reserved the costs of the application for
the rule 18 certificate
for decision by this
Court. The matter came to this Court because of a deliberate choice made by
the applicants to note their appeal
to this Court rather than to the SCA. This
decision was opposed by the other parties. That opposition turns out to be
correct.Â
There was, however, some uncertainty at that time as to whether the
appeal should have been brought to the SCA or this Court.
[34]
 The merits of the appeal have
not been canvassed in this judgment. There is a possibility, however, that the
dismissal of the
application will not be the last word on the matter. On the
other hand, it is desirable that finality should be achieved without
undue
delay. Should the applicants take the matter further, the costs should be
costs in the cause. If, on the other hand, the
matter is not taken further, it
is appropriate that the applicants should pay the costs. If the applicants
wish to take the matter
further, they must initiate proceedings to do so within
one month from the date of this judgment. If they fail to do so, or are
unable
to secure leave to appeal, they must pay the costs of this application
including the costs of the rule 18 proceedings in the
High Court.
The order
[25]
        In the result the following order is made:
(i)Â Â Â Â Â The application for leave to appeal to
this Court is refused;
(ii)Â Â Â Â Should the applicants take the matter further, the costs will
be costs in the cause. If the applicants wish to take
the matter further, they
must initiate proceedings to do so within one month from the date of this
judgment. If they fail to do
so, or are unable to secure leave to appeal,
applicants must pay the costs of this application including the costs of the
rule 18
proceedings in the High Court. Such costs should, in respect of the
respondent, include the costs of two counsel.
Chaskalson P, Ackermann J, Didcott J,
Goldstone J, Kriegler J, Madala J, Mokgoro J, OâRegan J, Sachs J and Yacoob J
concur in the
judgment of Langa DP.
For the Applicants:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Dr ED Levin instructed by J Knoetze
and Partners.
For the Respondents:Â Â Â Mr MJD Wallis SC, Mr CJ Pammenter SC and Mr G
Reddy instructed by Cajee, Essa, Ismail & Thejpal.
For the Intervening Party:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Mr AJ Dickson SC instructed by
Shepstone & Wylie, Tomlinsons c/o Webber Wentzel Bowens.
[1]
Society of Advocates of Natal v De Freitas and Another
(Natal Law Society Intervening)
1997 (4) SA 1134
(N) at 1174.
[2]
Act 74 of 1964.
[3]
The matter has been dealt with in terms of Constitutional
Court Rules, 1995 contained in Government Notice R1584, Regulation Gazette
5394
of 16 September 1994, as amended. These have now been superseded by
Constitutional Court Rules, 1998 as promulgated in Government
Notice R757,
Regulation Gazette 6199 of 29 May 1998.
[4]
Johannesburg Bar Council v Stein
1946 TPD 115
;
Society of Advocates of Natal and Another v Knox
and Others
1954 (2) SA 246
(N).
[5]
Attorney-General v Tatham
1916
TPD 160.
[6]
State Attorney v L
(1895) 2 OR
214.
[7]
Act 62 of 1995.
[8]
Section 22 provides:
â
Every citizen has the right to
choose their trade, occupation or profession freely. The practice of a trade,
occupation or profession
may be regulated by law.â
[9]
Section 39(3) states:
â
The Bill of Rights does not deny the
existence of any other rights or freedoms that are recognised or conferred by
common law, customary
law or legislation, to the extent that they are
consistent with the Bill.â
[10]
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996
[11]
The 1996 Constitution came into force on 4 February 1997.
[12]
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993.
[13]
Now the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[14]
Section 101(5) of the interim Constitution.
[15]
Section 168(3) of the 1996 Constitution.
[16]
1997 (4) SA 1076
(CC);
1997 (10) BCLR 1413
(CC).
[17]
The legislation, the Constitutional Court Complementary Act
Amendment Act 79 of 1997, has since been passed. Â See also n 3 above.
[18]
Above n 16 at para 11.
[19]
Id para 26.
[20]
Above n 1 at 1170A-E. See also
The General Council of the
Bar of South Africa v Van der Spuy
, Case No 13013/96, unreported judgment
handed down in the Transvaal High Court on 12 March 1998 at 90-1.
[21]
De Freitas and Another v The Society of Advocates of Natal
, Case No 2834/96, unreported judgment handed down in the Natal High
Court on 18 December 1997.
[22]
[1998] ZACC 9
;
1998 (7) BCLR 855
(CC).
[23]
Id para 31.
[24]
CCT 4/98 delivered on 27 August 1998, as yet unreported.
[25]
Id para 33.
[26]
Above n 21 at 7.
[27]
Id 7. See also Attorneys Act 53 of 1979;
Pretoria
Balieraad v Beyers
1966 (1) SA 112
(T) at 115 B-D.
[28]
See
De Villiers and Another v McIntyre NO
1921 AD 425
;
Beyers
v Pretoria Balieraad
1966 (2) SA 593
(T) at 605;
Pienaar and Versveld v
Incorporated Law Society
1902 TS 11
at 16;
Prokureursorde van Transvaal
v Kleynhans
1995 (1) SA 839
(T);
Algemene Balieraad van Suid Afrika v
Burger en ân Ander
1993 (4) SA 510
(T) at 516G;
Van der Spuy
above n
20 at 47.
[29]
Above n 16
at para 35;
Du Plessis and Others v De
Klerk and Another
[1996] ZACC 10
;
1996 (3) SA 850
(CC);
1996 (5) BCLR 658
(CC) at paras
13-14; 20 and 68.
[30]
Above n 24 at para 16.
[31]
Section 35(3) of the interim Constitution provides:
â
In the
interpretation of any law and the application and development of the common law
and customary law, a court shall have due regard
to the spirit, purport and
objects of this Chapter.â
See also
Du Plessis and Others
above n 29
at paras 59 - 64, 87, 137 and 138;
Gardener v Whitaker
[1996] ZACC 11
;
1996 (4) SA 337
(CC);
1996 (6) BCLR 775
(CC) at paras 16 and 17;
Amod
above n 24.
[32]
Above n 24.
[33]
Id para 22. See also section 39(2) of the 1996 Constitution.
[34]
Above n 24 at paras 10 and 11.