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[2004] ZASCA 64
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Price Waterhouse Coopers Inc and Others v National Potato Co-operative Ltd (448/2003) [2004] ZASCA 64; [2004] 3 All SA 20 (SCA); 2004 (9) BCLR 930 (SCA); 2004 (6) SA 66 (SCA) (1 June 2004)
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Last Updated: 4 September 2004
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No 448/02
REPORTABLE
PRICE WATERHOUSE COOPERS INC FIRST
APPELLANT
HOEK WIEHAHN
SECOND APPELLANT
WIEHAHN MEYERNEL
THIRD APPELLANT
PRICE WATERHOUSE MEYERNEL
FOURTH APPELLANT
PRICE WATERHOUSE
FIFTH APPELLANT
and
NATIONAL POTATO CO-OPERATIVE LTD
RESPONDENT
Before: Harms, Cameron, Conradie, Lewis JJA and Southwood
AJA
Heard: 11 May 2004
Delivered: 1 June
2004
Summary: Champerty – an agreement in terms of which a person
provides a litigant with funds to litigate in return for a share
of the
proceeds of the litigation is not contrary to public policy or void –
illegality of such agreement not a defence
in the litigation – courts
empowered to prevent abuse of process despite right of access in s 34 of
Constitution –
special order of costs against attorney ignoring
agreements about
record.
__________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
__________________________________________________________
SOUTHWOOD AJA
[1] The question which arises in this appeal is
whether an alleged champertous agreement between the respondent Co-operative
(the
plaintiff in the court below) and a third party to finance the
respondent’s action against a firm of accountants, the appellants
(the
defendants in the court below) may be relied upon by the appellants as a defence
to the respondent’s claim. In this judgment,
I shall refer to the
appellants, individually and collectively, as ‘Price Waterhouse’ and
to the respondent as ‘the
Co-operative’.
[2] The salient
facts as they emerged from the Co-operative’s evidence (Price Waterhouse
did not tender any) are as follows:
The Co-operative is a primary agricultural
co-operative registered in terms of the Co-operatives Act, No 91 of 1981. During
1997
the Co-operative appointed Collett, Du Toit & Associates (Pty) Ltd
(‘CDA’) to investigate certain irregularities
allegedly committed by
the Co-operative’s then general manager, Mr Boonzaaier. Mr David Collett,
a chartered accountant, was
to conduct the investigation for
CDA.
[3] Late in 1997, CDA submitted a draft preliminary report to the
Co-operative’s board of directors. In this report Collett
listed the
irregularities which he had found and expressed the view that Mr Boonzaaier
was heavily involved in the commission
of these irregularities. The report also
referred to other matters which, in Collett’s opinion, should have been
detected and
reported by the auditor. In November 1997, and apparently because
of this report, Price Waterhouse resigned as the Co-operative’s
auditor at
the annual general meeting.
[4] CDA continued to investigate the
irregularities but by April 1998 the focus of the investigation had changed to
the viability
of a claim against Price Waterhouse. On 27 March 1998 Collett gave
his findings to a senior advocate and requested him to furnish
an opinion on the
Co-operative’s prospects of success if it were to institute an action
against Price Waterhouse.
[5] The cost of CDA’s investigation put a
strain on the Co-operative’s financial position and the
Co-operative’s
management advised the board not to proceed with the
investigation. The board chose instead to investigate alternative means of
financing
the litigation. Its initial proposal was to find a third party to
finance the litigation in exchange for a share of the proceeds
of a successful
action. The proposal contemplated that the third party would contribute an
amount of R1,5 million to the cost of
prosecuting the action and the third party
and the Co-operative would share the proceeds of a successful claim.
[6] On 17 April 1998, after consulting a number of the
Co-operative’s members who apparently supported the action contemplated,
the Co-operative’s board of directors resolved to sell the
Co-operative’s claim against Price Waterhouse to Unitrade
40 (Pty) Ltd
(which later changed its name to Farmers Indemnity Fund (Pty) Ltd and will
henceforth be referred to as ‘FIF’).
FIF had been incorporated on 29
October 1997 as a shelf company. From 30 October 1997 until 13 May 1998
FIF’s 100 shares were
held by the Gerne Trust of which Mr Buitendag, the
Co-operative’s then attorney, and the Co-operative’s present
attorney
of record, was the beneficiary.
[7] On 13 May 1998 the
Co-operative entered into a written agreement (the ‘sale agreement’)
with FIF in terms of which
it sold its right, title and interest in the claim
against Price Waterhouse to FIF for 50 per cent of the gross proceeds of a
successful
claim or settlement of the claim. The agreement recorded that as at
31 March 1998 the Co-operative had already contributed an
amount of R1,1
million to pay for legal advice and the cost of CDA’s investigation and
that it would be liable for all costs
incurred up to 30 April 1998. The
parties agreed that the Co-operative’s contribution would be deemed to be
R1,5 million
and that FIF also would contribute R1,5 million to pay for the
costs of the investigation, the legal costs and the expert’s
fees and
qualifying expenses necessary to institute the action against Price Waterhouse
and bring the claim to finality. The parties
also agreed that FIF would be
liable for costs incurred after 1 May 1998, but that if the costs
incurred after 1 May 1998
exceeded R1,5 million, the additional costs would be
borne equally by FIF and the Co-operative.
[8] The preamble to the sale
agreement recorded, and FIF and the Co-operative pertinently agreed, that the
Co-operative was selling
its claim to FIF because it was not able to finance the
litigation contemplated against Price Waterhouse and regarded the sale as
an
alternative method of financing the action.
[9] In the sale agreement the
Co-operative and FIF also agreed how the shares in FIF were to be held. Members
of the Co-operative
were to be entitled to take up one third of the shares,
Euro-Africa Investments (Pty) Ltd (‘Euro-Africa’), a company
controlled by a financier, Mr P S Schledorn, was to be entitled to take up one
third of the shares and members of the Co-operative
or other persons would be
entitled to take up the remaining one third of the shares on a ‘first
come, first served’ basis.
If the Co-operative’s members did not
take up their allotted one third of the shares within 30 days of signature of
the agreement
the remaining shares could be taken up by any other person or body
on a ‘first come, first served’ basis.
[10] The sale
agreement provided that initially FIF’s board would consist of four
directors: one appointed by the Co-operative;
one by Euro-Africa, one was to be
a member of the Co-operative and one was to be appointed by the shareholders
taking up the remaining
one third of the shares. The first four directors were
Mr D J Pieterse (appointed by the Co-operative – also its chairman);
Mr B
C J van Rensburg (a member of the Co-operative – also its vice-chairman);
Mr P S Schledorn (appointed by Euro-Africa)
and Mr W J A Labuschagne (on behalf
of the first come, first served shareholders – also a member of the
Co-operative’s
board).
[11] The agreement recorded that FIF
purchased the claim on the strength of research done in connection with the
claim, that the claim
appears from the Co-operative’s records and that FIF
would prosecute the claim at its own risk. The parties agreed that the
Co-operative would co-operate fully with FIF for the purposes of the action and
that FIF would appoint the professional team to conduct
the
litigation.
[12] On 12 May 1998 Mr Buitendag resigned as director of FIF
and Messrs Pieterse, Van Rensburg and Labuschagne were appointed as directors.
On 14 May 1998 FIF changed its main object and principal business to the
acquisition of claims for litigation. It gave as the reason
for this change that
it would enable FIF to acquire a claim from the Co-operative for litigation.
[13] On 17 April 1998 FIF increased its authorised share capital of
1 000 one rand shares to 2 000 one rand shares. On 14 May
1998 FIF further
increased its authorised share capital to 2 000 000 one rand shares. FIF did
this so that it could issue shares
to obtain the funds to finance the
litigation.
[14] In May 1998, the Co-operative’s members were
invited to subscribe for shares in FIF. In August 1998, 1 664 400 shares were
issued to 15 shareholders. According to the documents in the record these
included four of the Co-operative’s members, Mr Pieterse
(the
chairman – 100 000 shares); Mr Van Rensburg (the vice-chairman – 185
000 shares); Mr J D Van der Merwe (a director
– 5 000 shares) and Mr
G J Van Rooyen (100 000 shares). Euro-Africa (which later became NAK Financial
Assistance (Pty)
Ltd) took up 750 000 shares.
[15] The
Co-operative’s board was still concerned about the arrangements made to
finance the action and decided to obtain legal
advice on the question. In
December 1998 a senior advocate advised the Co-operative’s attorney, Mr
Buitendag, that the sale
agreement was champertous, accordingly against public
policy and invalid and that it did not achieve its objective. He advised Mr
Buitendag that the agreement should be cancelled and the claim ceded back to the
Co-operative; that the claim should remain with
the Co-operative; and that the
Co-operative should be the plaintiff in the action. He also advised that a new
agreement should be
entered into in terms of which FIF would finance the
litigation in return for 50 per cent of the proceeds of the litigation. He
expressed
the view that although the suggested arrangement could be a pactum
de quota litis it would not necessarily be objectionable. However, he warned
that the proposed arrangement could be attacked, apparently because
it might be
seen to be of a ‘gambling character’. His concern was that if the
Co-operative’s action failed, FIF
would get nothing, whereas if it
succeeded FIF would get 50 per cent of the proceeds. His view was that Price
Waterhouse would not
be able to rely on the arrangement as a defence (to an
action instituted by the Co-operative) but that the agreement could create
problems if a dispute arose between FIF and the Co-operative. During February
1999 this advice was conveyed to the Co-operative’s
board, which was also
informed that in accordance with the advice new agreements were being prepared
to protect the investors’
interests.
[16] In October 1999 the
Co-operative and FIF entered into two agreements: an agreement in terms of which
they cancelled the sale
agreement and an agreement in terms of which FIF
undertook to provide financial assistance to the Co-operative to enable the
Co-operative
to pursue its claim against Price Waterhouse (‘the assistance
agreement’). In the assistance agreement the parties recorded
that the
estimated cost of litigation to recover the claim amounted to R1,5 million; FIF
undertook to provide assistance to the Co-operative
in pursuing the claim
against Price Waterhouse and as part of the assistance would contribute R1,5
million as from 1 April 1998;
the parties agreed that if the litigation costs
exceeded R1,5 million they would bear the excess equally; FIF’s board
would
determine the funding requirements for litigation costs in excess of the
R1,5 million and the amount, date and method of contribution
(in excess of the
R1,5 million) to be made by FIF’s shareholders and the Co-operative. The
assistance agreement further provided
that in return the Co-operative would pay
to FIF 45 per cent of the proceeds derived from the claim after certain agreed
amounts
had been deducted. As security for this obligation the Co-operative and
FIF entered into an ancillary agreement in terms of which
the Co-operative ceded
to FIF 45 per cent of its right to the proceeds of the claim. The parties also
entered into a further ancillary
agreement in terms of which the Co-operative
conditionally ceded to FIF its claim against Price Waterhouse. This cession
would take
effect in the event, inter alia, of the Co-operative not pursuing the
claim to final judgment or not being able to do so. If this
happened FIF
undertook to pay to the Co-operative 20 per cent of the proceeds of the claim
after deducting the litigation and other
costs pertaining to the recovery of the
claim.
[17] Various provisions of the assistance agreement emphasise
FIF’s interest in the claim and the proceeds of the claim. The
Co-operative was not permitted to sell or cede its right, title and interest in
the claim to any third party without the written
consent of FIF and the
Co-operative was not permitted to accept an offer of settlement or make a
counter-offer without consulting
FIF. There were also detailed provisions for
the payment to FIF of its share of the proceeds.
[18] CDA’s
investigation revealed that the damages recoverable by the Co-operative from
Price Waterhouse could be very large.
When the Co-operative first sold the claim
to FIF the damages recoverable were thought to exceed R100
million.
[19] During November 1999 the Co-operative instituted an action
against Price Waterhouse in the Pretoria High Court claiming damages
in the sum
of R283 490 742,19 on the grounds of breach of contract. It alleged that during
the period 1983 to 1998 Price Waterhouse
breached the contracts in terms of
which they acted as the Co-operative’s auditors by failing to carry out
the audits properly
in accordance with the relevant common law and statutory
rules. Later, the Co-operative increased the amount claimed to R353 890
045,72.
[20] In 2002, the matter came to trial before Hartzenberg J. During
cross-examination of the first witness Price Waterhouse were granted
an
amendment to their plea and the Co-operative was permitted to file a replication
in answer. The amendment to the plea raised two
issues: first, that during 1998
the Co-operative had ceded its right, title and interest in the claim against
Price Waterhouse to
FIF, that the purported cancellation of this cession was
invalid and accordingly that Price Waterhouse had no locus standi in
respect of the claim; second, that the Co-operative was prosecuting the action
pursuant to an agreement which was champertous
and contrary to public policy and
accordingly that the Co-operative’s claim should not be upheld. The
Co-operative’s
reply was that the parties to the cession of the
Co-operative’s claim had effectively cancelled the cession and that the
second
agreement in terms of which the Co-operative arranged for the action to
be financed was not champertous and contrary to pubic policy.
The trial
proceeded on these limited issues.
[21] The court below found against
Price Waterhouse on both issues raised in the amendment to the plea. Although
Price Waterhouse
appealed against the whole judgment their counsel did not make
any submissions on the first issue. It is accordingly not necessary
to consider
this issue further. What remains to be considered is whether the arrangements
made by the Co-operative to finance its
litigation against Price Waterhouse are
contrary to public policy and, if so, whether this will constitute a defence to
the Co-operative’s
claim.
[22] The issue has three separate
elements. First, what is the public policy regarding the financial support of a
litigant by a stranger
to the litigation. Second, whether an agreement in terms
of which FIF undertook to contribute funds to the Co-operative in return
for a
share of the proceeds of the action is contrary to public policy and therefore
void. Third, whether that fact constitutes a
defence to the Co-operative’s
claim against Price Waterhouse.
[23] At common law agreements that are
contrary to public policy are void and not enforceable. While public policy
generally favours
the utmost freedom of contract it does take into account the
necessity for doing ‘simple justice between man and man’.
Therefore,
when a court finds that an agreement is contrary to public policy it should not
hesitate to say so and refuse to enforce
it. However, the court should exercise
this power only in cases where the impropriety of the transaction and the
element of public
harm are manifest. It is an important consideration that there
be certainty about the validity of agreements and that this certainty
could be
undermined by an arbitrary and indiscriminate use of the power to declare
agreements contrary to public policy (see Sasfin (Pty) Ltd v Beukes 1989
(1) SA 1 (A) at 7I-J and 9A-C; Botha (now Griessel) and another v
Finanscredit (Pty) Ltd 1989 (3) SA 773 (A) at 782J-783B; Brisley v
Drotsky 2002 (4) SA 1 (SCA) para 94; Afrox Healthcare Bpk v Strydom
2002 (6) SA 21 (SCA) para 8).
[24] What public policy is and when an
agreement is contrary to public policy are often difficult and contentious
questions. Since
the advent of the Constitution public policy is rooted in the
Constitution and the fundamental values it enshrines (Brisley v Drotsky
supra para 91; Afrox Healthcare Bpk v Strydom supra para 18). The
fundamental values enshrined in the Constitution and the interests of the
community or the public are accordingly
of the utmost importance in relation to
the concept of public policy. Therefore an agreement will be regarded as
contrary to public
policy when it is clearly inimical to these constitutional
values, or the interests of the community, whether it be contrary to law
or
morality or runs counter to social or economic expedience (Sasfin (Pty) Ltd v
Beukes supra at 8C-D; Botha (now Griessel) and another v
Finanscredit (Pty) Ltd supra at 782I-J). It is important to bear in mind
that views about what public policy entails are constantly evolving (Magna
Alloys and Research (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Ellis [1984] ZASCA 116; 1984 (4) SA 874 (A) at 891H) and
the court must be careful not to conclude that an agreement is contrary to
public policy just because some of its
terms offend against its sense of
propriety and fairness (Sasfin (Pty) Ltd v Beukes supra at 9B-C). It is
also important to bear in mind that to decide whether an agreement is against
public policy a court must look
at the tendency of the proposed transaction, not
its actually proved result (Sasfin (Pty) Ltd v Beukes supra at 8G-9B;
Eastwood v Shepstone 1902 TS 294 at 302).
[25] The agreement in
issue in the present case is an agreement between the Co-operative and FIF in
terms of which FIF undertook to
provide the Co-operative with funds to enable
the Co-operative to prosecute its case against Price Waterhouse in return for
forty
five per cent of the proceeds. Such agreements, called pacta de quota
litis, were known to Roman and Roman-Dutch law and have been looked upon
with disfavour ever since the days of the Roman Empire. The reason
for this was
that they were considered to encourage speculative litigation and consequently
amounted to an abuse of the legal process
(Wessels The Law of Contract
in South Africa 2 ed by AA Roberts vol 1 paras 510-511). From the
19th Century our law has often referred to such a contract as
‘maintenance and champerty’ and adopted some of the rules of
English
law without attempting to reconcile these rules with the principles of
Roman-Dutch law. In English law, maintenance and champerty
are two distinct
concepts. Maintenance is the improper assistance by one person of litigation
conducted by another, in which the
former has no legitimate interest, without
just cause or excuse. Champerty is an aggravated form of maintenance and occurs
when the
person maintaining another stipulates for a share of the proceeds of
the action or suit. (Trendtex Trading Corp v Crédit Suisse [1980]
3 ALL ER 721 (CA) at 749.) Not all such agreements were objectionable, but when
they were found to be contrary to public policy, they were regarded
as illegal
and unenforceable.
[26] A number of cases decided in South Africa in the last
years of the 19th and the early part of the 20th Century
show that the courts took an uncompromising view of agreements which I shall
call champertous (ie any agreement whereby an
outsider provided finance to
enable a party to litigate in return for a share of the proceeds of the action
if that party was successful
or any agreement whereby a party was said to
‘traffic’, gamble or speculate in litigation), and refused to
entertain
litigation following on such agreements or to enforce them (see
Green v De Villiers, Dr Leyds, N.O., and The Rand Exploring Syndicate
[1895] 2 OR 289 at 293-294; Thomas Hugo and Fred J Möller NO v The
Transvaal Loan, Finance and Mortgage Company [1894] 2 OR 336 at 339-341;
Schweizer’s Claimholders’ Rights Syndicate, Limited v The Rand
Exploring Syndicate, Limited [1896] 2 OR 140 at 144-5; C.V.J.J. Platteau
v S.P. Grobler [1897] 4 OR 389 at 394-396; Campbell v Welverdiend
Diamonds, Ltd 1930 TPD 287 at 292-4).
[27] However, it is clear that
the courts acknowledged one exception. It was accepted that if any one, in good
faith, gave financial
assistance to a poor suitor and thereby helped him to
prosecute an action in return for a reasonable recompense or interest in the
suit, the agreement would not be unlawful or void (per Kotze CJ in Thomas
Hugo and Fred J Möller NO v The Transvaal Loan, Finance and Mortgage
Company supra at 340: Schweizer’s Claimholders’ Rights
Syndicate Limited v The Rand Exploring Syndicate, Limited supra at 144:
Patz v Salzburg 1907 TS 526 at 527). In a number of these early cases the
courts adopted and applied statements pertaining to maintenance and champerty
made
by the Privy Council in Ram Coomar Coondoo and another v Chunder Canto
Mookerjee 1886 2 AC 186 at 210. The Privy Council said that –
‘a fair agreement to supply funds to carry on a suit in consideration
of having a share of the property, if recovered, ought
not to be regarded as
being per se opposed to public policy. Indeed, cases may be easily
supposed in which it would be in furtherance of right and justice and necessary
to resist oppression, that a suitor who had a just title to property, and no
means except the property itself, should be assisted
in this manner’.
However, it warned –
‘that agreements of this kind ought to
be carefully watched, and when found to be extortionate and unconscionable, so
as to
be inequitable against the party; or to be made not with the bona
fide object of assisting a claim believed to be just, and of obtaining a
reasonable recompense therefor, but for improper objects, as
for the purpose of
gambling in litigation, or of injuring or oppressing others by abetting and
encouraging unrighteous suits, so
as to be contrary to public policy –
effect ought not to be given to them’.
(See Platteau v Grobler
supra at 394-395; Thomas Hugo and Fred J Möller NO v The Transvaal Loan,
Finance and Mortgage Company supra at 340; Schweizer’s
Claimholders’ Rights Syndicate, Limited v The Rand Exploring Syndicate
Limited supra at 144-5; Patz v Salzburg supra at 527-528; Campbell
v Welverdiend Diamonds, Ltd supra at 290-1.) This was early recognition that
in a case where an injustice would be done if a litigant was not given financial
assistance to conduct his case a champertous arrangement would not be contrary
to public policy.
[28] Although the number of reported cases concerned
with champertous agreements diminished, courts have still adhered to the view
that generally they are unlawful and that litigation pursuant to such agreements
should not be entertained (see eg Lekeur v Santam Insurance Co Ltd 1969
(3) SA 1 (C); Goodgold Jewellery (Pty) Ltd v Brevadau CC 1992 (4) SA 474
(W)).
[29] The reasons for champertous agreements being considered to be
contrary to public policy have not, so far, been reconsidered or
tested by the
courts in the light of changed circumstances and, in particular, in the light of
the Constitution. It is instructive
to have regard first to the position in
English law.
[30] English common law condemned champerty out of a
concern for the integrity of the judicial system; the fear that champertous
agreements
may give rise to abuses such as the inflation of damages; the
suppressing of evidence and the suborning of witnesses (Re Trepca Mines Ltd
[1962] 3 ALL ER 351 at 355: Giles v Thompson and related appeals
[1993] UKHL 2; [1993] 3 ALL ER 321 (CA and HL) at 331g-j per Steyn
LJ).
[31] Notwithstanding this concern and fear the law of maintenance
and champerty has undergone many changes, particularly in the course
of the
20th Century. In Giles v Thompson and related appeals supra
the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords dealt with these changes in some
detail (per Steyn LJ in the Court of Appeal at 328a-333b
and per Lord Mustill in
the House of Lords at 350h-351f and 360a-h).
[32] The law of maintenance
and champerty developed out of a need to protect the system of civil justice;
and as the civil justice
system has developed its own inner strength the need
for the rules for maintenance and champerty has diminished – if not
entirely
disappeared.
[33] Lord Mustill observes that in mediaeval times
the mechanisms of justice lacked the internal strength to resist the oppression
of private individuals through suits fomented and sustained by unscrupulous men
of power. Champerty was particularly vicious because
the purchase of a share in
litigation presented an obvious temptation to the suborning of justices and
witnesses and the exploitation
of worthless claims which the defendant lacked
the resources and influence to withstand. Two important factors contributed to
the
growth of these abuses; first, there was no independent judiciary
(‘detachment and disinterestedness was not the hallmark of
the mediaeval
judiciary’) and second, the civil justice system was not developed and was
not capable of exposing abuses of
legal procedure and giving effective redress.
To deal with these abuses a number of statutes created the offences of
maintenance
and champerty. Gradually these conditions disappeared and by the
beginning of the 19th Century England had an independent judiciary
(‘the cold neutrality of the impartial judge became the established
convention’)
and after the procedural reforms of the 19th
Century there was an effective civil justice system. Despite these changes the
offences and torts of maintenance and champerty lingered
on in atrophied form
for more than a century after any public interest in preserving them had
disappeared.
[34] In 1967 after an investigation and recommendation by
the United Kingdom Law Commission (Proposals for Reform of the Law relating
to Maintenance and Champerty: Law Com no 7) the Criminal Law Act of 1967 was
passed. In terms of s 13(1) and 14(1) of the Act the offences and torts of
maintenance
and champerty were abolished but s 14(2) preserved the status quo
regarding contracts. It provided expressly that the abolition of
criminal and
civil liability for maintenance and champerty would not affect any rule of that
law as to the cases in which a contract
is to be treated as contrary to public
policy or otherwise illegal.
[35] The United Kingdom Law Commission also
considered the effect of illegality of champertous agreements on the practice of
solicitors.
It stated that the question whether solicitors should be permitted
to enter into contingency fee agreements (involving payment to
the solicitor of
an agreed percentage of compensation recovered) required further study. The
public policy condemning contingency
fee agreements then became a matter for
public debate.
[36] In 1989 the United Kingdom government published a
Green Paper on Contingency Fees (Cm 571) and after the consultation
process proceeded to consider (a) the introduction in England and Wales of
speculative actions
on the Scottish model, that is on a ‘no win, no
fees’ basis and (b) the validation of agreements for an uplift (ie
increase)
in percentage terms in the costs payable, to encourage lawyers to
undertake speculative actions, such uplift being unrelated to the
amount of the
damages or property recovered. This was followed by a White Paper (Legal
Services: A Framework for the Future (Cm 740)) in which the government
proposed the removal of the prohibition on these fee arrangements in all cases
except criminal
and family proceedings.
[37] These proposals led to the
enactment of s 58 of the United Kingdom Courts and Legal Services Act 1990. This
permitted speculative
actions in accordance with the Scottish practice and
rendered enforceable, subject to certain conditions, a conditional fee
agreement.
The most important condition was the strict regulation of the
percentage whereby the fee was to be increased. The Lord Chancellor
was to be
given the power to regulate the increase. At the time of the judgment the Lord
Chancellor had not yet exercised that power.
[38] The importance of this
change was emphasised by Steyn LJ in Giles v Thompson and related appeals
supra at 331d-f. He pointed out that the ability to recover fees beyond what
was otherwise reasonable was intended to be an incentive
to lawyers to undertake
speculative actions. Such agreements were still unlawful in the absence of the
Lord Chancellor’s order.
Nevertheless it was a clear departure from the
rationale of the common law rule that such agreements cause the duty and
interest
of solicitors to conflict, with a resultant risk of abuse of legal
procedure. It clearly recognised that the abuses associated with
champerty are
not the inevitable result of all varieties of contingency fee agreements. This,
he said, was cogent evidence of a change
of public policy.
[39] These
developments in English law are mirrored in South African law. The judiciary is
independent. Its independence is guaranteed
by the Constitution. The civil
justice system is regulated by the state and has the necessary mechanisms to
withstand the abuses
perceived to flow from champertous agreements. There are
trained and disciplined legal professionals who are subject to strong ethical
codes. And there are pre-trial procedures such as discovery to ensure that
evidence is not fabricated or suppressed. There is also
the trial itself where
the veracity of the evidence can be properly tested. There is also the cost of
losing. This is a great disincentive
to the dishonest litigant.
[40] After the South African Law Commission investigated and reported on
the question (South African Law Commission Project 93 ‘Speculative and
Contingency Fees’ November 1996: the Commission recommended that
contingency fee agreements should be legalized in South African law and that
common law prohibitions on such fees should be removed), our legislature
followed the English example of permitting contingency fee
arrangements –
‘no win, no fees’ and increased fees in case of success – but
subject to strict controls.
As in England this represented a watershed in public
policy and was brought about by the view that it is in the public interest that
litigants be able to take their justiciable disputes to court for adjudication.
(A system of contingency fees ‘can contribute
significantly to promote
access to the courts’ and ‘such a system is desirable’ –
Summary of Recommendations and Draft Bill, SA Law Commission Project 93.)
[41] The Contingency Fees Act 66 of 1997 (which came into operation on
23 April 1999), provides for two forms of contingency fee agreements
which
attorneys and advocates may enter into with their clients. The first, is a
‘no win, no fees’ agreement (s 2(1)(a))
and the second is an
agreement in terms of which the legal practitioner is entitled to fees higher
than the normal fee if the client
is successful (s 2(1)(b)). The second type of
agreement is subject to limitations. Higher fees may not exceed the normal fees
of
the legal practitioner by more than 100 per cent and in the case of claims
sounding in money this fee may not exceed 25 per cent
of the total amount
awarded or any amount obtained by the client in consequence of the proceedings,
excluding costs (s 2(2)). The
Act has detailed requirements for the agreement (s
3), the procedure to be followed when a matter is settled (s 4) and gives the
client a right of review (s 5). The professional controlling bodies may
make rules which they deem necessary to give effect
to the Act (s 6) and the
Minister of Justice may make regulations for implementing and monitoring the
provisions of the Act (s 7).
The clear intention is that contingency fees be
carefully controlled. The Act was enacted to legitimise contingency fee
agreements
between legal practitioners and their clients which would otherwise
be prohibited by the common law. Any contingency fee agreement
between such
parties which is not covered by the Act is therefore illegal. What is of
significance, however, is that by permitting
‘no win, no fees’
agreements the legislature has made speculative litigation possible. And by
permitting increased fee
agreements the legislature has made it possible for
legal practitioners to receive part of the proceeds of the
action.
[42] As in England, this Act is designed to encourage legal
practitioners to undertake speculative actions for their clients. The
legislature was obviously of the view that the conflict between the duty and
interests of legal practitioners would not lead to an
abuse of legal procedure.
It clearly considered that it is better that people be able to take their
disputes to court in this way
rather than not at all.
[43] In my view this
approach is consistent with the right enshrined in s 34 of the Constitution:
everyone has the right to have any
dispute that can be resolved by the
application of law decided in a fair public hearing before a court, or, where
appropriate, another
independent and impartial tribunal or forum. On a number of
occasions the Constitutional Court has emphasised the importance of this
right:
it is of cardinal importance and requires active protection and courts have a
duty to protect bona fide litigants (Beinash and another v Ernst &
Young and others 1999 (2) SA 116 (CC) para 17); the ‘untrammelled
access to the courts is also a fundamental right of every individual in an open
and democratic
society based on human dignity, equality and freedom’
(Moise v Greater Germiston Transitional Local Council: Minister of Justice
and Constitutional Development Intervening (Women’s
Legal Centre as Amicus
Curiae) [2001] ZACC 21; 2001 (4) SA 491 (CC) para 23); it is the foundation for stability of
an orderly society and it ‘ensures the peaceful, regulated and
institutionalised
mechanisms to resolve disputes, without resorting to self
help’: it is ‘a bulwark against vigilantism, and the chaos
and
anarchy which it causes’ (Chief Lesapo v North-west Agricultural Bank
and another [1999] ZACC 16; 2000 (1) SA 409 (CC) para 22); it is fundamental to a democratic
society that cherishes the rule of law (First National Bank of South Africa
Ltd v Land and Agricultural Bank of South Africa and others; Sheard v
Land and Agricultural Bank of South Africa and another [2000] ZACC 9; 2000 (3) SA 626 (CC)
para 6).
[44] In my view, upholding agreements between a litigant and a
third party who finances the litigation for reward is also consistent
with the
constitutional values underlining freedom of contract. Cameron JA
summarised the position in Brisley v Drotsky 2002 (4) SA 1 (SCA) para 94
–
‘(T)he constitutional values of dignity, equality and freedom
require that the Courts approach their task of striking down contracts
or
declining to enforce them with perceptive restraint ... contractual autonomy is
part of freedom. Shorn of its obscene excesses,
contractual autonomy informs
also the constitutional value of dignity.’
(See also Afrox
Healthcare Bpk v Strydom 2002 (6) SA 21 (SCA) paras 22-23.)
[45] The
legislature has expressly recognised that the civil justice system is strong
enough to withstand the abuses which could arise
as a result of contingency fee
agreements between legal practitioners and their clients and it has made such
agreements legal within
carefully circumscribed limits and subject to regulation
by the professions’ controlling bodies and the Minister of Justice.
This
is a significant change in view of the fact that dishonest legal practitioners
conducting the lawsuit would be in the best possible
position to manipulate the
facts to get a favourable outcome in the suit.
[46] In my view it must
also be recognised that the civil justice system is strong enough to withstand
the perceived abuses which
could arise if civil litigation is made possible by
financial support given by persons who provide such support in return for a
share
of the proceeds. Accordingly it must be held that an agreement in terms of
which a stranger to a lawsuit advances funds to a litigant
on condition that his
remuneration, in case the litigant wins the action, is to be part of the
proceeds of the suit, is not contrary
to public policy. Price Waterhouse are
therefore not entitled to base a defence on the assistance agreement.
[47] In the court below the case proceeded differently since both
parties accepted, as did the trial judge, that champertous agreements
are void.
In view of my conclusion, that assumption was erroneous. Because Hartzenberg J
found that the assistance agreement did
not conflict with public policy and was
accordingly not unenforceable, it was not necessary for him to consider whether
the invalidity
of the agreement would afford the respondent a defence. Since
this question may arise in cases where an attorney’s contingency
fee
agreement is unlawful I shall deal with it.
[48] The fact that a
litigant has entered into an unlawful agreement with a third party to provide
funds to finance his case is a
matter extraneous to the dispute between the
litigant and the other party and is therefore irrelevant to the issues arising
in the
dispute, whatever the cause of action. Accordingly, the illegality of the
agreement between a plaintiff and his legal representatives
cannot be a defence
to the action (compare Fouché v The Corporation of the London
Assurance 1931 WLD 146 at 153; Lekeur v Santam Insurance Co Ltd 1969
(3) SA 1 (C) at 6D-F; Giles v Thompson and related appeals supra at
336h-g (per Steyn LJ) 340d-341a (per Gibson LJ), and 348j-349e (per Bingham
MR)).
[49] Price Waterhouse referred, however, to cases decided in South
Africa where courts had non-suited plaintiffs because they were
being assisted
in the litigation pursuant to a champertous agreement, (see eg Thomas
Hugo and Fred J Möller NO v The Transvaal Loan, Finance and Mortgage
Co [1894] 1 OR 336 at 340-1; Green v De Villiers, Dr Leyds, NO and The
Rand Exploring Syndicate [1895] 2 OR 289 at 293-4; Schweizer’s
Claimholders’ Rights Syndicate, Limited v The Rand Exploring Syndicate,
Limited [1896] 3 OR 140 at 144-5; Campbell v Welverdiend Diamonds,
Ltd 1930 TPD 287 at 294). However, none of these cases explained how the
fact that the agreement between the third party and the plaintiff was illegal
could be a defence to the plaintiff’s claim against the defendant, or
where the court derived the power to dismiss or refuse
to entertain a
plaintiff’s action on this ground. In my view there was no basis for
finding that the illegal agreements were
a defence or a ground for refusing to
entertain the actions. These cases were accordingly incorrectly decided.
Although based on
different grounds Hartzenberg J’s conclusion was
therefore correct.
[50] An agreement in terms of which a person provides
funds to enable a litigant to prosecute an action in return for a share of
the
proceeds may be relevant in the context of abuse of process. It has long been
recognised in South Africa that a court is entitled
to protect itself and others
against the abuse of its process (see Western Assurance Co v Caldwell’s
Trustee 1918 AD 262 at 271; Corderoy v Union Government (Minister of
Finance) 1918 AD 512 at 517; Hudson v Hudson and another 1927 AD 259
at 268; Beinash v Wixley [1997] ZASCA 32; 1997 (3) SA 721 (A) at 734D; Brummer v Gorfil
Brothers Investments (Pty) Ltd en andere 1999 (3) SA 389 (SCA) at 412C-D),
but no all-embracing definition of ‘abuse of process’ has been
formulated. Frivolous or vexatious litigation
has been held to be an abuse of
process (per Innes CJ in Western Assurance v Caldwell’s Trustee
supra at 271 and in Corderoy v Union Government (Minister of Finance)
supra at 517) and it has been said that ‘an attempt made to use for
ulterior purposes machinery devised for the better administration
of
justice’ would constitute an abuse of the process (Hudson v Hudson
and another supra at 268). In general, legal process is used properly
when it is invoked for the vindication of rights or the enforcement of
just
claims and it is abused when it is diverted from its true course so as to serve
extortion or oppression; or to exert pressure
so as to achieve an improper end.
The mere application of a particular court procedure for a purpose other than
that for which it
was primarily intended is typical, but not complete proof, of
mala fides. In order to prove mala fides a further inference that
an improper result was intended is required. Such an application of a court
procedure (for a purpose other
than that for which it was primarily intended) is
therefore a characteristic, rather than a definition, of mala fides.
Purpose or motive, even a mischievous or malicious motive, is not in general a
criteria for unlawfulness or invalidity. An improper
motive may however be a
factor where the abuse of court process is in issue. (Brummer v Gorfil
Brothers Investments (Pty) Ltd en andere supra at 412I-J; 414I-J and 416B).
Accordingly, a plaintiff who has no bona fide claim but intends to use
litigation to cause the defendant financial (or other) prejudice will be abusing
the process (see Beinash and another v Ernst & Young and others 1999
(2) SA 116 (CC) para 13). Nevertheless it is important to bear in mind that
courts of law are open to all and it is only in exceptional cases
that a court
will close its doors to anyone who wishes to prosecute an action (per Solomon JA
in Western Assurance Co v Caldwell’s Trustee 1918 AD 262 at
273-274). The importance of the right of access to courts enshrined by section
34 of the Constitution has already been referred
to. However, where a litigant
abuses the process this right will be restricted to protect and secure the right
of access for those
with bona fide disputes (Beinash and another v
Ernst & Young and others supra para 17).
[51] In the present
case, there is no suggestion that the Co-operative’s claim is not bona
fide. Before instituting the action the Co-operative employed a chartered
accountant to investigate the facts and appointed two senior
counsel to
investigate and advise on the law. It is highly probable that the Co-operative
would have instituted the action against
Price Waterhouse without the assistance
of FIF had the Co-operative been in a position to do so. There is no suggestion
that the
Co-operative wishes to do more than to recover damages for the breach
of contract which it has alleged. Clearly the position would
be different if the
Co-operative’s claim was not bona fide and was brought simply to
cause Price Waterhouse embarrassment or financial harm.
[52] To
summarise:
(1) an agreement in terms of which a person provides a litigant
with funds to prosecute an action in return for a share of the proceeds
of the
action is not contrary to public policy or void;
(2) the illegality of such
an agreement or an attorney’s contingency fee agreement would not be a
defence in the action;
(3) litigation pursuant to such an agreement may
constitute an abuse of the process which in appropriate circumstances a court
may
prevent notwithstanding a litigant’s right of access to the courts
enshrined in s 34 of the Constitution.
[53] Price Waterhouse’s appeal
must therefore be dismissed.
COSTS
[54] Unfortunately it
is necessary to comment on the Co-operative’s attorney’s attempts to
supplement the record.
[55] For purposes of the trial the parties agreed
that, in the absence of objection, copies of documents could be used and that
the
documents were what they purported to be. The parties also agreed that no
document would be admissible unless it had been referred
to in evidence.
[56] After leave to appeal was granted Price Waterhouse’s
attorney, Deneys Reitz, and the Co-operative’s erstwhile attorney,
MacRoberts, agreed to restrict the record to the evidence relevant to the
limited issues. Deneys Reitz prepared the appeal record
and served it on
MacRoberts on 13 February 2003 and shortly thereafter lodged copies of the
record with the registrar of this court.
[57] At the end of February
2003 the Co-operative terminated MacRoberts’ mandate and on 16 April 2003
appointed Buitendag’s
Attorneys as its attorney. The Co-operative had been
in possession of the record (then approximately 1 000 pages) since about 7 April
2003. On 22 April 2003 Mr Buitendag of Buitendag’s Attorneys initiated
correspondence expressing his dissatisfaction with the
record. Mr
Buitendag’s complaints related primarily to the accuracy of the record.
However he also complained that some documents
had been wrongly included or
excluded. Deneys Reitz pointed out that the contents of the record had been
agreed upon with MacRoberts
and that the minor errors could be brought to the
attention of the court in argument. Nevertheless Deneys Reitz suggested that a
meeting be held to resolve the problem. A meeting was arranged for 23 June 2003.
[58] Prior to that meeting Deneys Reitz took steps to correct the errors in
the transcript and requested an extension of the period
in which Price
Waterhouse were to file their heads of argument. An order was made that the
period be extended to 31 July 2003 (on
the assumption that the parties had
agreed on the record by not later than 30 June 2003) and that, if no agreement
was reached by
30 June 2003, either party was entitled to approach the court for
further directions or extensions.
[59] Despite reaching agreement on 23
June 2003 about the matters to be rectified Mr Buitendag continued to express
dissatisfaction
about the record. The basis for the complaint also shifted. He
demanded that certain documents which had not been handed in as exhibits
be
incorporated. He said that certain documents in the record created a misleading
impression because they had not been incorporated
in their proper factual
context, that Price Waterhouse’s legal representatives withheld these
facts from the court and that
there was a duty on Price Waterhouse’s legal
representatives to place before this court all documents relevant to the issues.
Mr Buitendag contended that certain documents obtained by Price
Waterhouse’s legal representatives by means of subpoenas had
not been
disclosed to the court. Deneys Reitz correctly responded that documents not
referred to in evidence should not be included.
Deneys Reitz asked the registrar
for a ruling on the issue.
[60] On 23 August 2003 the court ordered Price
Waterhouse to lodge the agreed record within one month and directed that if the
Co-operative
wished to add to the record it should do so by lodging a
supplementary record and addressing the issue in its heads of argument.
The
court also directed that an additional volume of all correspondence regarding
the issues around the record be lodged.
[61] Pursuant to the order Deneys
Reitz prepared a volume containing the correspondence (124 pages). Mr Buitendag
was not satisfied
with this bundle of correspondence and prepared a bundle of
correspondence and a bundle of documents which he maintains should be
included
in the record. The bundle of correspondence runs to 373 pages and fills three
volumes. It needlessly included every letter
in Price Waterhouse’s bundle.
The bundle of documents runs to 268 pages and also fills three volumes.
[62] It is plain that the agreement about the documents and the
agreement about the record govern the contents of the record filed.
This was not
disputed by Mr Buitendag. He was entitled to insist on compliance with these
agreements but no more than that. The clear
purpose of the second agreement was
to limit the appeal to what was essential. Neither party was free to disregard
the agreements
and attempt to place before this court documents which had not
been placed before the trial court. Mr Buitendag apparently thought
that he was
entitled to do so. Not only did he attempt to have other documents included in
the record but he also filed affidavits
dealing with these documents and what
had been given to Price Waterhouse’s legal representatives. The result is
another seven
volumes of record, largely irrelevant, and of no use to this
court. This is due to Mr Buitendag’s obstinate adherence
to a clearly
erroneous view.
[63] The additional seven volumes have imposed upon the
members of this court a considerable and unnecessary burden. It is appropriate
that the Co-operative bear the costs associated with these volumes. In addition,
and as a mark of the court’s displeasure at
the conduct of Mr Buitendag,
it will be ordered that he is not to receive a fee for perusing the record.
[64] The following order is made:
(a) The appeal is dismissed.
(b) The respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the 4 volumes of
correspondence and the 3 volumes of additional documents including
the
appellants’ attorney’s fee for perusing these volumes.
(c) The
appellants are ordered to pay the costs of the appeal (excluding the costs
referred to in para (b)) such costs to include
the costs consequent upon the
employment of two counsel.
(c) It is ordered that Mr Buitendag, the
respondent’s attorney of record, is not to receive a fee for perusing the
record from
either the appellants or the respondent.
________________
B R SOUTHWOOD
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
CONCUR:
HARMS JA
CAMERON JA
CONRADIE
JA
LEWIS JA