Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 25South Africa
Platinum Park 1 Homeowners Association NPC v Mokoena and Another (088262/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 25 (9 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
9 January 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Platinum Park 1 Homeowners Association NPC v Mokoena and Another (088262/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 25 (9 January 2025)
Platinum Park 1 Homeowners Association NPC v Mokoena and Another (088262/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 25 (9 January 2025)
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sino date 9 January 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO: 088262/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
DATE:
09 January 2025
SIGNATURE:
In matter between
PLATINUM
PARK 1 HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION NPC
Applicant
and
NALEDI
PERTUNIA MOKOENA
First Respondent
TIISETSO
WILLIAM MOKOENA
Second Respondent
Delivered: This judgement
was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is
handed down electronically by circulation
to the Parties /their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Case Lines. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be
09 January 2025
JUDGMENT
LESUFI AJ
[1]
The applicant brought an application to
have the respondents’ estate provisionally sequestrated,
averring that the latter’s
levies towards the association were
in arrears. The parties’ oral arguments were only limited to
the issue regarding the
late filing of the respondents’
answering affidavit after this court directed them to answer in its
order dated 27 January
2024.
[2]
Before I could consider condonation
application arguments in order to prepare and write this judgment, I
had to read the papers
so as to satisfy myself that it would be in
the interest of justice to grant the provisional order solely on the
basis of noncompliance
with the Rules of this Court.
[3]
Having heard the arguments presented by
both parties and read the parties’ papers, I identified very
compelling and concerning
aspects which required this court’s
intervention to deal with the parties’ issues once and for all.
[4]
I
found that the notice of motion was filed on 1 September 2023.
[1]
.
The founding affidavit was deposed by one Mr. Johny Khwele who,
according to the voluminous papers I read, was one of the directors
elected by the homeowners more than five years before this
application was made. A draft order was made by this court on 26
January
2024, directing both parties to act in terms thereof.
[2]
On page 14-38-14-57 of the caseline, I found a Community Scheme Ombud
Services(CSOS) adjudication order dated 17 April 2022, which
directed
the board of directors whose legitimacy to govern was challenged by
some homeowners to convene an Annual General Meeting(AGM)
after an
auditor has finalized the association’s audited financial
statements.
[5]
It is clear from the papers I read that the
applicant is one of the people who alleged that he diverted the
payment of his monthly
levies to an Attorney’s Trust account
until all governance issues have been dealt with.
[6]
The deponent to this affidavit approached
this court for a provisional sequestration order on 1 September 2023
fully aware of the
CSOS order but failed to disclose its existence to
this court and why the provisional order was sought before compliance
with the
CSOS order. Clearly when this court granted the draft order
on 26 January 2024, the CSOS order was not brought to its attention
for it to exercise a judicial discretion on whether it was in the
interest of justice to make such an order when there were clear
pending issues related not only to the governance of the association
but also to clear audited financial statements of the association.
[7]
The latter was very important to assist the
court in determining whether a prima facie case of indebtedness was
made before even
directing the applicant to file any answering
affidavit. The CSOS order, as I read, seeks to have all the
association’s governance
and financial matters corrected by a
board of directors elected in terms of its own constitution. This
court cannot allow any party
to approach it for this kind of relief
when such a party is aware of pending issues that have the potential
to resolve the complaint
of any form of indebtedness towards the
association.
[8]
It is also clear from the papers that
contempt of this court’s application was served on the board of
directors for its failure
to comply with the CSOS order and that such
order was according to the papers, still pending before this court.
The deponent to
the founding affidavit failed to disclose this
important developments to this court when filing the sequestration
application.
These non- disclosures clearly had the effect of
prompting this court to grant the draft order of the applicant as it
believed
that the information provided by the applicant was the only
information known to the applicant for the court to consider and to
the extent of directing the respondents to answer the allegations
made in the sequestration application.
[9]
Instead, what the applicant’s counsel
did during the hearing was simply argue that I must grant the draft
order he presented
because the respondents failed to explain the
reasons the answering affidavit was filed late. I was tempted to
grant the order
until I satisfied myself that such would not have
been in the interests of justice given all these non-disclosures on
the part
of the applicant.
[10]
Property ownership is one of the most
valuable assets and right protected by this country’s
Constitution and for any court
to assist a third party to deprive
another party of that right, this court must be satisfied that it is
the only remedy available
to the aggrieved party. Put differently it
is an intervention of the last resort.
[11]
The applicants in this case are not
innocent litigants on the association’s financial matters
because they have, according
to these papers, still failed to comply
with the CSOS order and it is approximately more than two years since
it was issued by
the Adjudicator.
[12]
Since the parties have not argued the
preliminary issues of jurisdiction and the applicant’s
locus
standi
raised by the applicant as the
court only limited them to arguing condonation for the late filing of
the answering affidavit, I
am not going to make any determination on
the two points of law, including Rule 7(1). I am equally not going to
make any order
on the issue of the respondents’ condonation
application or lack thereof. I am not going to endorse the draft
order handed
by the applicants either.
[13]
This court, when making the order on 26
January 2024, was not provided with full details of the board of
directors’ governance
status, no audited financial statements
as ordered by CSOS against the applicants, in order to assist this
court in clearly determining
the extent of the respondents’
indebtedness. The order made by this court on 26 January 2024 was
erroneously granted in the
absence of the affected party and further
that there was an omission. This court has inherent powers to make
judicial decisions
which promote the interests of justice against
always fixating itself to penalizing parties because of slight non-
compliance with
its Rules.
[14]
It is for these reasons that I make the
following order
14.1
This
application
is
struck
off
the
roll
subject
to
the
following condition:
14.1.1
The applicants or their successors must
prove to the court that they have complied with the CSOS order and
that the respondents’
indebtedness was determined by CSOS
before reinstating this application before this court for
consideration.
14.2
No order as to costs.
B LESUFI
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant
Adv.
Z Schoeman instructed by Kleynhans & Swanepoel Inc.
For
the Respondent
Nkosi
SP Inc. Attorneys
Date
of hearing
21
October 2024
Date
of Judgment
09
January 2025
[1]
Page
01-1-01-36
[2]
08-1-08-4.
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