The three maritime silks, the missed briefs and the lost Zimbabwean
A naval engagement of some moment is underway in the Competition Tribunal. A young Zimbabwean advocate (Simba Chitando), recently admitted to the Cape Bar, has complained that three silks and four firms of attorneys in Cape Town are engaged in anti-competitive behaviour in breach of the Competition Act because they have all overlooked him as a junior member of the Cape Bar who could be briefed in maritime matters, given his master's degree in maritime law.
The Cape Bar is a voluntary association, some would say a well organised trade union, which has its own Constitution and Rules. All members of the Bar are required, on joining (or "being called" as they used to say) to sign a register in which they "undertake to abide by ... the Constitution and Rules [of the Cape Bar]".
The applicable rules are a mixture of what are quaintly called "Old Cape Rules" and the Uniform Rules which the General Council of the Bar has imposed upon all of its constituent Bars around the country. In the "Rules and Discipline" section of the Constitution it is recorded that: "The Cape Bar may revoke or amend any of the Uniform Rules insofar as it (sic) applies to the members of the Cape Bar." For good measure it is also recorded that: "The Rules of the Cape Bar relating to Practice and Professional Conduct ... shall ... be binding on all members of the Cape Bar."
Old Cape Rule 7 has apparently been overlooked in the complaint to the Competition Commission. Insofar as it is relevant it provides, very properly for a referral profession such as the Bar, that: "Counsel shall not take instructions or fees otherwise than through the medium of an attorney..."
More importantly the replacement of Uniform Rule 4.29.1, which binds the complaining advocate and his senior colleagues, provides that: "It is not improper of Counsel to recommend other Counsel to attorneys or lay clients when asked to do so for the purpose of obtaining the services of Counsel with the expertise and experience appropriate to the matter in question, provided that such recommendation is not made for any other purpose."