• Applicant failed to fully disclose business involvement and financial benefit; the court finds dishonesty under oath.
  • Contradictions in affidavits and bank records undermine the credibility and integrity of the evidence.
  • Court rules applicant not fit and proper, dismisses admission application.

The High Court in Pietermaritzburg has dismissed an application by Bongekile Adonica Gasa, a 30-year-old aspiring attorney, to be admitted and enrolled as a legal practitioner.

What began as a seemingly straightforward admission application unravelled when the court found that Gasa had failed to make full and honest disclosure about her business interests and financial dealings during her two-year period of practical vocational training.

At the heart of the matter was whether Gasa met the legal requirement of being a “fit and proper” person, and what is required of an applicant when making a disclosure in an ex parte admission application. Acting Judge W Pietersen, with Judge J Henriques concurring, held that she fell short of that standard, citing serious concerns about her honesty, integrity, and compliance with professional obligations.

Gasa approached the court in 2023 seeking admission as an attorney. Her application was not straightforward. She also sought condonation for failing to comply with Rule 17.2.9 of the South African Legal Practice Rules (LPC Rules), which requires a candidate to confirm that they held no position other than that of candidate legal practitioner during the period of training.

She also sought an order declaring that her practical vocational training contract, entered into on 20 February 2021 with her principal, Andre Pieter Vos, a director of Norton Rose Fulbright (NRF) in Sandton, was not void ab initio and that the service rendered thereunder was not ineffective, as contemplated by rule 22.1.5.2 of the LPC Rules. The contract was registered with the LPC, Gauteng, on 15 March 2021, with a commencement date of 25 January 2021.

In her founding affidavit, Gasa disclosed that she had been the sole director and 100% shareholder of a small domestic cleaning company, Garris and Projects (Pty) Ltd (Garris), throughout her training. She had first become a director at the age of 20, while still in her second year of university. She described the business as modest in scale, generating approximately R15 000 per month, employing three workers, and insisted it had not interfered with her training in any way.

She stated in her founding affidavit, “Save for my role in controlling the company’s bank account and payment effected therefrom, I have not been actively involved in the running of the business nor did I receive any payment for holding a position as director of the company.” She further stated, “I do not enjoy a profit from the company. It provides support to the three employees. I have never supplemented my candidate legal practitioner salary with money from the company.”

Contradictions in disclosure and financial records

The court, however, found that this picture did not hold up. Bank statements for Garris, held with First National Bank, told a different story, showing frequent payments, sometimes more than once per day, carrying the reference “Directors’ Wage” and mostly ranging between R1 000 and R5 000.

Gasa’s personal Capitec Bank account told a similar story, reflecting numerous credits carrying references such as “House Contribution”, “Joint Transfer” and “Directors’ Wages”. As the sole director of Garris, the court found it followed that these amounts were paid to her personally. Critically, the court noted that these payments were largely unexplained and that Gasa had “elected not to deal with these payments at all.”

The account Gasa gave of her role in the company also shifted significantly as the proceedings progressed. She initially claimed her involvement was minimal and limited to controlling the bank account. Yet a draft supplementary affidavit she submitted to the LPC in September 2023 painted a far more active picture, describing how she managed the company, created weekly rosters, held meetings with staff, and conducted site inspections throughout her training.

It also emerged that a business partner, Roger Norris, managed day-to-day operations, while a managing employee, Ndumiso Khulusi, supervised other workers. This directly contradicted her earlier sworn statement that Garris employed only three black female employees. Taken together, these contradictions fundamentally undermined her credibility before the court.

The unravelling of support from those closest to Gasa was telling. Her employer, Norton Rose Fulbright (NRF), initially backed her application but withdrew that support in November 2023 as further disclosures came to light. Her principal, Andre Pieter Vos, formally withdrew by supplementary affidavit on 3 November 2023. Allison Patricia Williams, a director at NRF’s Durban office who had mentored Gasa, also withdrew her backing after learning of the judgment in Ex Parte Galela and Another and discovering that Gasa had submitted a draft affidavit to the LPC without her knowledge and in direct contravention of her advice.

Sentebale Makara, another NRF director, added his voice to the growing concerns, confirming in an affidavit that he had personally warned Gasa during her training that holding a directorship and maintaining any financial interest in a business were impermissible without the LPC’s prior written consent. A further discrepancy came to light when the court directed Gasa to produce Garris’s annual financial statements. She told the court she had only managed to pay the accountant on 25 July 2025, yet the financial statements themselves bore her signature, dated 31 March 2025.

Evidence from the employer and the LPC

The Legal Practice Council appointed an investigating committee to assess whether the errors and omissions in Gasa’s founding affidavit had been adequately addressed. The committee interviewed Gasa, Williams, Makara and Vos, and called for the company’s bank statements. Its findings were measured but pointed. The committee said it was “difficult to escape the suspicion that the Applicant tried to play down her involvement with Garris” and concluded that “she was more involved in Garris than the founding affidavit discloses.”

On the question of whether she received remuneration from Garris, the committee could only say that “the answer was not clear.” The LPC ultimately chose not to formally oppose the application, expressing the view that Gasa had already suffered sufficient consequences and leaving the final call to the court. The court, however, was not persuaded, finding that the totality of the evidence painted a far more troubling picture.

On the issue of disclosure, the court reaffirmed that applications for admission as a legal practitioner are brought on an ex parte basis, requiring utmost good faith. Citing Ex Parte Swain, the court noted that “the professions of advocate and attorney require the utmost good faith from all practitioners and aspirant practitioners.” It emphasised, drawing on Mukwevho v Legal Practice Council, that “when any material facts are not disclosed, be it wilfully or negligently omitted, a court may on that ground alone dismiss an ex parte application.” In this case, the court found that the non-disclosure went well beyond negligence.

Court on honesty and fiduciary duties

The court was unsparing in its assessment of Gasa’s conduct. It found that she had knowingly signed a supplementary affidavit she knew to be inaccurate and which contradicted what she had said in her initial founding affidavit, while also failing to account for extensive financial records. Drawing on Ex Parte Mdyogolo, the court held that such non-disclosure “amounted to lying under oath” and “evidences a lack of honesty, integrity and trustworthiness, all of which are essential qualities for any member of the attorneys’ profession.”

The court drew a sharp distinction between this case and the Supreme Court of Appeal’s decision in Siyabonga Gugulethu Galela (Ex parte application), where non-disclosure had been found to be negligent rather than deliberate. In that matter, the company had never opened a bank account, received no income and filed no tax returns. The facts before the court in Gasa’s case were, in the court’s view, vastly different.

The court also turned its attention to how Gasa had conducted herself as a director of Garris. Under s 76 of the Companies Act 71 of 2008, a director is required to act in good faith, for a proper purpose, in the best interests of the company, and with the degree of care, skill and diligence reasonably expected of someone in that role. The court found she had fallen well short of this standard. Her argument that she had simply delegated her responsibilities to Norris was firmly rejected. The court held that “neither the Companies Act nor the common law allows for a director to effectively abandon his or her duties and entrust those duties to a manager”, and that her conduct “goes beyond that of mere incompetence.”

Fit and proper test not satisfied

In measuring Gasa against the fit and proper standard, the court drew on a range of established authorities. The Supreme Court of Appeal, in Gaone Jack Siamisang Montshiwa (Ex Parte Application), confirmed that the qualities required include “integrity, hard work, dignity, honesty, fairness and respect for legal order.”

The court also cited Vatsha v Johannesburg Society of Advocates, which held that a legal practitioner must have “a strong character and have an instinctive inward and unseen integrity no less than an outward and visible ostensible honesty”, and that “expressions of remorse might open the door, but what must be paraded is concrete evidence of a self-awareness of the character defect, not merely sincere regret.” The court found that Gasa failed to meet this standard.

Weighing up the full picture, the court found that Gasa’s misleading statements, inconsistent disclosures, failure to account for financial benefits derived from Garris, breach of her fiduciary duties, and dishonesty about the availability of the company’s financial statements collectively disqualified her from admission.

The finding on fitness and propriety was, in the court’s view, dispositive of the entire application, making it unnecessary to separately consider the condonation relief she had sought. The court noted that even if condonation were on the table, it would first need to be satisfied that she had demonstrated “good cause” and was a “fit and proper” person, a threshold she had plainly not met.

The court’s closing words were unambiguous. Gasa “has been untruthful in her affidavits in more than one respect” and has failed to demonstrate the character the legal profession demands. The application was dismissed. The judgment was handed down electronically on 25 March 2026.

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