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Home » A matter of trust: Cape Town lawyer struck from roll for misappropriating client funds and refusing to repay
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A matter of trust: Cape Town lawyer struck from roll for misappropriating client funds and refusing to repay

Western Cape High Court removes attorney over decade-long misconduct and breach of client trust
Kennedy MudzuliBy Kennedy MudzuliJuly 14, 2025Updated:July 14, 2025No Comments
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  • Deon Beukman failed to return R50 000 owed to a client.
  • He admitted guilt but never repaid the money.
  • Court ruled he is unfit to practise law.

After more than four decades in the legal profession, a Cape Town attorney has been struck from the roll following a drawn-out misconduct case that laid bare the very values upon which the legal system depends: honesty, accountability, and trust.

Deon Jakobus Beukman, 70, once entrusted with managing client funds in a routine property transaction, now finds himself on the wrong side of the law he swore to uphold. The Western Cape High Court ordered his removal from the roll of legal practitioners on 11 July 2025, citing a pattern of dishonesty and disregard for ethical obligations that “brought the legal profession into disrepute.”

When lawyers fall short of the law

It began more than a decade ago, with the sale of a modest property in Somerset West. Beukman acted as the conveyancer in a transaction between a young buyer, Ian Jacobs, and a seller who passed away before the transfer was completed. The seller’s insolvent estate cancelled the sale. What should have been a disappointing but resolvable matter turned into a slow-burning scandal.

Jacobs had paid over R561 000 into Beukman’s care. While most of that was refunded after the sale failed, a further R50 000 paid as commission to the estate agent was quietly returned to Beukman by the agent in 2015. Yet Beukman neither informed his client nor returned the funds. Instead, as was later revealed, he used the money to cover his legal costs. That silence and the years that followed, would ultimately cost him his standing in the profession.

The Legal Practice Council (LPC), which regulates the conduct of lawyers in South Africa, launched an investigation after receiving a complaint in 2021. Despite multiple opportunities to set things right, Beukman refused to repay the money, challenged the LPC’s jurisdiction, and only admitted wrongdoing after being cornered during a disciplinary hearing in 2024. Even then, the R50 000 was never repaid.

The cost of integrity, the price of silence

The High Court’s judgment, penned by Acting Judge N Mayosi and concurred by Judge H Slingers, cuts to the heart of what’s at stake when legal practitioners fail to uphold the standard expected of them.

“This is not about the quantum,” the court noted. “It is about the principle.” Whether it’s R5 000 or R5 million, the court said, clients must be able to trust that their money is safe and that their legal representatives will act transparently and in good faith.

Throughout the proceedings, Beukman painted himself as a struggling elderly consultant, reliant on support from his son. But the court found his version to be inconsistent and, at times, disingenuous. He claimed to have given up his practice, yet later admitted to sharing offices and legal fees with another attorney, conduct he himself acknowledged could get him disbarred.

“What stands out,” the court said, “is not just the initial misappropriation, but the ongoing refusal to take accountability, the evasive answers, and the absence of remorse.”

A public puty, a private failure

In a profession built on honour, Beukman’s conduct represents more than a personal failing, it’s a betrayal of the social contract between lawyer and client, between the legal system and those it serves.

It also raises critical questions about delays in regulatory enforcement. The LPC, while ultimately successful in its application, took more than three years to prosecute the complaint. The court cautioned the regulatory body to act with greater urgency, given the public interest at stake.

For Jacobs, the buyer still waiting for repayment, justice may have come late, but it came with clarity.

The court ordered Beukman to return the R50 000 by 30 November 2025 or face contempt proceedings. More importantly, his name is to be removed from the roll, sealing the end of a long legal career tarnished by a single but consequential act of dishonesty.

#Conviction

Attorney Misconduct Beukman Legal Practice Council Trust Funds Western Cape High Court Legal Aid
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Kennedy Mudzuli

Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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