Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 929South Africa
Naidoo v Chicktay N.O. and Others (39321/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 929 (22 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Naidoo v Chicktay N.O. and Others (39321/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 929 (22 November 2022)
Naidoo v Chicktay N.O. and Others (39321/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 929 (22 November 2022)
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sino date 22 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NUMBER:
39321/2021
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
22 November 2022
In
the matter between:
CANDICE
NAIDOO
Applicant
and
MOHAMED
ALLI CHICKTAY NO
First
Respondent
COMMUNITY
SCHEMES OMBUD SERVICE
Second Respondent
EMBASSY
GARDENS BODY CORPORATE
Third Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
AJ
:
1
The applicant, Ms. Naidoo, owns a unit in the sectional title
scheme administered by the third respondent, Embassy Gardens. On 11
August 2020, Ms. Naidoo sought permission from Embassy Gardens to
erect a pergola in the garden area outside her unit. She provided
a
picture of a structure which was “something like” what
she wanted to erect, and asked how she might go about getting
Embassy
Gardens’ permission to do so.
2
Embassy Gardens responded to Ms. Naidoo’s request on 14
August 2020. Its managing agent, Trafalgar Properties, refused the
request. The email in which it did so was written by Trafalgar
Properties’ Portfolio Manager, Brendan Beech. It stated that
“[t]he trustees would like to ensure that there is uniformity
in such structures and have therefore disapproved of your below
request.” The email added that the trustees “have
referred to the structures which other units have erected and stated
that it should be in line therewith”.
3
Ms. Naidoo took this message to mean that she could erect a
pergola, so long as it was sufficiently similar to other pergolas
erected
at Embassy Gardens. Without seeking further approval from
Embassy Gardens, she erected a pergola just outside her unit.
Although
the photographs provided to me were not the clearest, the
pergola erected seems to be very different to the structure Ms.
Naidoo
originally proposed.
4
Embassy Gardens objected to Ms. Naidoo’s pergola, both
on the basis that it had been erected without Embassy Gardens’
permission, and on the basis that the structure was not in keeping
with other pergolas in the Scheme. Embassy Gardens demanded
that the
structure be taken down. Ms. Naidoo demurred. She instead referred a
dispute to the second respondent, the Community Schemes
Ombud Service
(“CSOS”), in which she asked for an order allowing her to
keep the pergola.
5
The dispute was determined by the first respondent, the
Adjudicator, who dismissed Ms. Naidoo’s application.
6
Ms. Naidoo now asks me to review and set aside the
Adjudicator’s decision.
The
CSOS adjudication order
7
There is no dispute between the parties that the Adjudicator’s
order constitutes “administrative action” within
the
meaning of section 1 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3
of 2000 (“PAJA”), and that it is susceptible
to judicial
review. That accords with the prevailing authority in this Division,
which holds that the narrow appeal against adjudication
orders
permitted under section 57 of
Community Schemes
Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 (“the CSOS Act”) does not
exclude PAJA’s application (
Turley Manor Body
Corporate v Pillay
2020 JDR 0430 (GJ)
paragraphs 8 to 30).
8
The thrust of Ms. Naidoo’s review is
that the Adjudicator did not have appropriate regard to the evidence
she placed before
him. In my view, this is but a symptom of a much
more fundamental problem with the Adjudicator’s approach to her
application.
9
Section 50 of the CSOS Act provides that an
adjudicator “must investigate an application to decide whether
it would be appropriate
to make an order”. In this case, the
Adjudicator did not discharge that obligation, and his decision to
dismiss Ms. Naidoo’s
application falls to be reviewed and set
aside for that reason alone.
10
There are, in my view, two clear
indications on the record that the Adjudicator failed to discharge
his investigatory function.
The first indication is that the
Adjudicator failed to establish whether the dispute concerned a
“common area”, with
in the meaning of section 39 (6) (d)
of the CSOS Act. The second indication is the Adjudicator’s
failure to consider and
resolve the central question before him:
whether or not Ms. Naidoo’s erection of the pergola actually
breached Embassy Gardens’
Conduct Rules.
Failure to establish
whether the dispute was about a “common area”
11
Disputes before the CSOS must be capable of resolution by
making one or more of the orders set out in section 39 of the CSOS
Act.
If the dispute is incapable of being resolved by making an order
of the nature set out in section 39, then it is not a dispute over
which the CSOS has jurisdiction.
12
The Adjudicator in this case considered that the dispute
before him concerned a prayer for relief under section 39 (6) (d) of
the
CSOS Act. Section 39 (6) (d) authorises orders declaring that a
body corporate’s “decision to reject a proposal to make
improvements on or alterations to common areas is unreasonable”,
and directing the body corporate to agree or ratify such
a proposal.
13
In her application, Ms. Naidoo stated that she had erected a
structure in her “private garden”. The rule Embassy
Gardens
says has been breached by the erection of the pergola forbids
“[a]lterations, additions, extensions or repairs to the
exterior
sections, exclusive use areas or any portion of the common
property . . . without the prior written approval of the Trustees.”
14
It is accordingly clear that the rule applies to pergolas
erected in private gardens. But that does not mean that section 39
(6)
(d) of the CSOS Act applies. Section 39 (6) (d) applies only to
“common areas”. It does not apply to “exclusive
use
areas”. Nor does it apply to “exterior sections”,
unless those sections are also “common property”.
15
Ms. Naidoo’s reference to her “private garden”
ought to have triggered an investigation into whether that garden
was
a “common area” or an “exclusive use” area.
But the matter proceeded on the assumption that Ms. Naidoo’s
garden was a “common area” and that section 39 (6) (d)
applies. On the material before me, that assumption cannot be
made.
There was no evidence presented to that effect. Embassy Gardens’
Conduct Rules, which were annexed to their answering
affidavit, do
not address the issue.
16
Moreover, the CSOS Act defines a “common
area” as “any part of land or building in a community
scheme which is
intended for common use by occupiers”. That may
place Ms. Naidoo’s “private garden” beyond the
scope of
section 39 (6) (d), but I need not finally decide the issue.
Garden areas in sectional titles schemes are clearly capable of being
defined either as common or exclusive use areas, depending on the
arrangements adopted in a particular Scheme. Ms. Naidoo’s
description of the garden as her “private garden” is not
dispositive of the question.
17
The point is that the Adjudicator ought to
have investigated the issue, and to have made a finding. If he
concluded that Ms. Naidoo’s
garden was not a “common
area”, then he would have called upon to consider whether
section 39 offers another basis
on which he could assume
jurisdiction. If section 39 does not offer such a basis, then he
would have been bound to refuse an order
on the basis that he lacked
jurisdiction.
None of these issues was explored.
Failure
to investigate whether the pergola breached Embassy Gardens’
rules
18
Assuming that the Adjudicator had jurisdiction, it would then
have been necessary to decide whether the pergola was in fact in
breach
of the Conduct Rules. Here the Adjudicator made no such
finding, because he did not establish the facts necessary to reach
one.
19
The question before the Adjudicator was whether the structure
Ms. Naidoo erected was sufficiently similar to other such structures
erected at Embassy Gardens. At paragraph 30 of his decision, however,
the Adjudicator avoids this issue by observing that Ms. Naidoo
“has
not made an argument to show that her structure conforms with the
complex”. That was true enough. Ms. Naidoo had
in fact argued
that there was no uniformity in the pergolas already erected at
Embassy Gardens, and so the uniformity requirement
was meaningless.
20
The Adjudicator did not investigate whether (a) there was in
fact an existing uniformity to which Ms. Naidoo could reasonably have
been expected to adhere and (b) whether, if there was, her structure
actually adhered to it. He instead found that “the changes
made
by [Ms. Naidoo]
may have been
very different from what other
units had done” (my emphasis). But whether the structure Ms.
Naidoo erected was in fact sufficiently
different from those erected
by other unit owners was precisely the question that the Adjudicator
was required to investigate and
resolve. In failing to do so, the
Adjudicator abrogated his statutory function.
The
failure to secure permission before the pergola was erected
21
Ms. van der Laarse, who appeared for Embassy Gardens, defended
the Adjudicator’s decision on the basis that he was entitled
to
refuse relief merely because Ms. Naidoo had not secured Embassy
Gardens’ trustees’ “
prior
written approval” before erecting the pergola. This, as I have
already pointed out, is a requirement of Embassy Gardens’
Conduct Rules.
22
It is true that the Adjudicator criticised
Ms. Naidoo for failing to address the question of whether prior
written approval had
been obtained, but I do not think that he made a
positive finding that permission had not been obtained. Nor can it be
deduced
from his decision that he refused relief for that reason.
23
Moreover, assuming that the Adjudicator did
have jurisdiction under section 39 (6) (d) of the CSOS Act, I have
some doubts about
whether he would have been correct in law to reach
that conclusion. Section 39 (6) (d) (ii) of the Act empowers an
Adjudicator
to “ratify a proposal on specified terms”.
That, it seems to me, encompasses the condonation of an improvement
or alteration
which was unauthorised at the time it was made. I need
not finally decide the issue, as it is clear that, had he reached
that question,
the Adjudicator would have been duty bound to
investigate it and draw the appropriate conclusion on the facts he
established. The
Adjudicator neither reached the issue nor undertook
the necessary investigation.
24
It follows that Ms. van der Laarse’s
submission must be rejected. The Adjudicator did not dismiss Ms.
Naidoo’s application
on the basis that she failed to secure
prior written approval to erect the pergola. Absent the investigation
that the Adjudicator
was required, but failed, to carry out, it is
impossible to say whether he would have been entitled to dismiss Ms.
Naidoo’s
application on that basis.
Review under PAJA
25
For all these reasons, it seems to me that the Adjudicator’s
failure to investigate Ms. Naidoo’s application and establish
the facts relevant to his decision vitiates the order he made. There
was, at the very least, a failure to comply with “a
mandatory
and material procedure or condition prescribed by an empowering
provision” (section 6 (2) (b) of PAJA).
26
But the Adjudicator’s decision was also “
materially
influenced by an error of law” (section 6 (2) (d) of PAJA).
This was because the Adjudicator proceeded as if he
was entitled to
limit his own decision-making function to engaging only with the
arguments presented to him. That posture will
rarely be sound
adjudicative policy, but in the case of a matter brought before the
CSOS, it is wholly inappropriate. CSOS adjudicators
frequently deal
with lay litigants who are unable to argue with the knowledge and
precision expected of an experienced lawyer.
27
The CSOS Act enjoins adjudicators to tease
out and mature facts relevant to the disputes presented to them and
to avoid excessive
legal formalism while doing so (see, in
particular, sections 50 and 51). The Adjudicator’s approach in
this case was at odds
with these critical provisions of the Act.
Order
28
For all these reasons, I make the following order –
28.1 The
first respondent’s decision to dismiss the applicant’s
application is reviewed and set aside.
28.2 The
application is remitted to the second respondent for further
proceedings consistent with this judgment.
28.3 The
third respondent is directed to pay the applicant’s costs.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
9 November 2022
DECIDED
ON:
22 November 2022
For
the Applicant:
R More
Instructed by Tjale
Jubilee Attorneys
For
the Third Respondent:
Y van der Laarse
Instructed by Juke
Malekjee and Associates
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