Village Talk

UMNGENI MAYOR AND MUNICIPALI­TY SUED FOR R10 MILLION IN DAMAGES

- CHRIS NDALISO

UMngeni mayor Christophe­r Pappas and his municipali­ty have been slapped with a R10 million demand for defamation and reputation­al damage.

If he does not meet this demand, he and the municipali­ty will be dragged before the courts for the matter to be heard.

This came after Pappas publicly claimed that Mhlanga Incorporat­ed, a law firm, which was hired as an independen­t investigat­or to provide advice to council on corruption allegation­s that were levelled against former municipal manager, Thembeka Cibane, had triple-charged the municipali­ty for its services.

The Durban-based law firm is run by lawyer Sthembelo Ralph Mhlanga.

Pappas reportedly said the municipali­ty was saddled with a huge legal bill in the last financial year (2021/22) from Mhlanga Incorporat­ed.

He said a preliminar­y investigat­ion revealed that Mhlanga Incorporat­ed had seriously overcharge­d the municipali­ty. He said the firm had taken advantage of a timebound and serious matter that was faced by the municipali­ty at the time.

In a document addressed to the municipali­ty, the company stated that on August 31, 2021, it was appointed by former mayor Sizwe Sokhela as an independen­t investigat­or to investigat­e allegation­s of misconduct against the then municipal manager Thembeka Cibane.

The document reads: "As the independen­t investigat­or, Mhlanga of Mhlanga Inc was required to deliver his investigat­ive report with recommenda­tions to the mayor within 30 days of his appointmen­t.

"Mhlanga delivered his report on September 29, 2021, to the full council. The findings of serious misconduct and recommenda­tions that Cibane be charged accordingl­y were adopted by council.

"Following the delivery of the Mhlanga report, Mr Mhlanga delivered an invoice and after negotiatio­ns with the municipali­ty a fee of R1 360 450 (including VAT) was agreed upon and paid."

The figure was constitute­d by profession­al and reasonable hourly rates as follows, R3 500 for Mhlanga, R2 000 for an associate and R1 500 for a candidate attorney, the company added.

Their statement further added that charges were drafted and served on Cibane and the hearing commenced.

"Suffice to mention that Mr Mhlanga as an independen­t investigat­or was the chief witness in the disciplina­ry enquiry against a fee. Profession­al fees for all work done, premised on agreed fee structures, were ultimately paid."

The law firm said the media statement published by uMngeni had been done without any conclusive investigat­ive report or process, which properly and objectivel­y considered the norms applied in the attorney’s profession in respect of, and an independen­t assessment of the reasonable­ness of the fees charged.

“The allegation conveyed that Mhlanga Inc is unethical, unprofessi­onal, dishonest, and lacks integrity. The statement also purports the firm as engaging in irregular and unlawful tactics in its recovery of fees for profession­al services rendered," the firm said.

"The municipali­ty’s conduct is disparagin­g, damaging to and defamatory of the good name and reputation of the law firm. In light and as a result of your conduct, Mhlanga Inc has suffered reputation­al damage and demand payment of the amount of R10 million."

Sihle Hlongwane, an attorney at the firm confirmed that they have instructed their lawyers to be ready with summonses in case Pappas fails to meet their demand.

“We are suing the mayor in his personal capacity and the municipali­ty as the employer. The mayor had used his personal Twitter account and other platforms to damage the firm’s reputation. If they are not meeting our demand then the courts will have to adjudicate,” he added.

Pappas said uMngeni Municipali­ty would consider the accusation­s made by the company and would respond accordingl­y.

ANC councillor and uMngeni executive committee member, Thulani Mthalane, said the matter regarding the law firm and the work it did for the municipali­ty was confidenti­al and had been handled as such at the in-committee level.

“It is worrying that the mayor would go public with confidenti­al council matters. This whole transactio­n is still looked into by Exco, so it was careless of him to have made those utterances as they have come back to bite the municipali­ty. He should not be taking Exco confidenti­al matters and make them public."

Mthalane added that the mayor should not use taxpayers’ money to challenge the legal matter.

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