Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 281South Africa
Osho Property Ventures (Pty) Limited v Body Corporate Construction Park and Others (46109/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 281 (13 March 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Osho Property Ventures (Pty) Limited v Body Corporate Construction Park and Others (46109/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 281 (13 March 2025)
Osho Property Ventures (Pty) Limited v Body Corporate Construction Park and Others (46109/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 281 (13 March 2025)
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sino date 13 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case Number: 46109/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE
13 MARCH 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
OSHO
PROPERTY VENTURES (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
BODY
CORPORATE CONSTRUCTION PARK
First Respondent
AMBER
FALCON PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, PRETORIA
Third Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment 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 e-mail and by uploading it
to the electronic file of this matter on Caselines. The date
for
hand-down is deemed to be 13 March 2025.
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI,
J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant, OSHO Property Ventures (Pty)
Limited, and the first respondent, Body Corporate Construction Park
(“the Body
Corporate”), are in dispute as to the amounts
which are owed by the applicant to the Body Corporate for arrear
levies and
charges raised for the consumption of electricity relating
to a unit situated in a sectional titles development scheme which is
managed by the first respondent as the body corporate.
[2]
Construction
Park is a sectional titles scheme duly registered in terms of the
Sectional Titles Act
[1]
("the
STA") with sectional titles scheme registration number
SS703/2002.
[3]
Pursuant to the said dispute, the applicant
has instituted an application for a declaratory order coupled with a
mandatory interdict,
compelling the Body Corporate to issue a levies
clearance certificate to enable the applicant to take transfer of the
unit purchased
by it on 6 February 2020.
[4]
The relief set out in the applicant’s
notice of motion is for an order:
[4.1]
Declaring that the applicant is only obliged to pay levies in respect
of the unit purchased
from 1 July 2018. The date was,
during oral argument, amended to 6 February 2017.
[4.2]
Directing the Body Corporate to provide the applicant with a
statement of account. This prayer
was not persisted with during oral
argument.
[4.3]
Against payment of the levies due, directing the Body Corporate to
certify that all levies and
other amounts legally due have been paid.
[5]
The applicant refers to the amount due as
legally or lawfully due because of its contention that part of the
moneys due have prescribed.
[6]
The Body Corporate is opposing the relief
sought by the applicant on the premise that: the transfer of property
is subject to payment
of all the moneys due to the Body Corporate as
provided for in section 15B(3) of the STA; and that the applicant
contractually
accepted liability for such moneys in favour of the
Body Corporate.
[7]
There is no relief sought against the
second respondent and the third respondent, as such, those parties
are not participating in
these proceedings. The second respondent,
Amber Falcon Properties (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation), is represented by
the liquidators
who have been appointed to it by the Master. The
third respondent, the Registrar of Deeds, is generally a nominal
respondent in
matters of this nature because the requirement to issue
a clearance certificate impacts on the registrar’s entitlement
to
register the transfer of ownership. The third respondent is, thus,
joined in these proceedings as a necessary and interested party.
Facts
[8]
The
salient facts of this matter, which are common cause between the
parties, are that the unit in question is owned by the second
respondent. The second respondent is under liquidation and its
liquidators sold the unit to the applicant pursuant to an agreement
of sale concluded on 6 February 2020 (“the
agreement”). The unit was sold to the applicant in terms of the
afore stated agreement of sale for a purchase price of R 520 000,
excluding VAT. The applicant paid the full purchase
price against
receipt of a tax invoice from the liquidators on 11 February 2020
and took possession and occupation of
the unit on 13 February 2020,
against an immovable asset handover document issued by the
liquidators. As such, risk in
and to the property passed to the
applicant on 11 February 2020, and the applicant became
liable for the payment of taxes
and rates to the Municipality and for
the body corporate levies,
[2]
as
from that date.
[9]
It
became a material term of the sale agreement that the second
respondent was, as at date of signature of the sale agreement,
indebted to the Body Corporate in respect of arrear levies. As a
result, it was recorded in the agreement of sale that the applicant
would be liable for all amounts due and payable by the second
respondent to the Body Corporate. On payment of all the moneys due
to
the Body Corporate, the applicant was to be issued a certificate
required for transfer of the unit to it.
[3]
[10]
It
was, furthermore, a term of the agreement that the liquidators will
furnish the applicant with the resolution and power of attorney
authorising the applicant to liaise directly with the Body Corporate
to settle the quantum of the arrears due and payable to the
Body
Corporate in terms of which the Body Corporate agrees to accept an
agreed sum for the purpose of issuing the necessary levy
clearance
certificate required for the transfer of the unit.
[4]
[11]
On enquiry from the Body Corporate, the
applicant was informed that an amount of R 1 206 580.38
was outstanding in
the account of the second respondent. The
applicant refused to accept this amount claiming that any liability
of the applicant
to pay the Body Corporate arrear levies and
electricity charges was limited to a period going back three years
and that any older
amounts have prescribed.
Arguments
[12]
During
argument in court, it was brought to my attention that a lot of
issues raised in the applicant’s heads of argument
had fallen
by the wayside because the Body Corporate had abandoned its defence
based on interruption of prescription. The Body
Corporate had
initially, in its papers, based its defence on section 13 (1) (e) of
the Prescription Act
[5]
which
deals with prescription against a member of a governing body of a
juristic entity, and the issue of the liquidation application
against
the second respondent that was instituted in 2016. These issues were
raised by the Body Corporate aimed at arguing the
defence of
interruption of prescription.
[13]
Having abandoned the aforementioned
defences, what crystalises from the Body Corporate’s heads of
argument, is the issue of
the embargo provision as contained in
section 15B(3) of the STA. Although the embargo issue was not dealt
with in the answering
affidavit, it is a legal issue which could
fairly be raised by the Body Corporate during argument in court.
Applicant’s case
[14]
Against this new defence, the applicant
submits that the defence brings about the question of whether the
embargo provision provides
the Body Corporate with a real right that
the Body Corporate can now hold up against the world and refuse to
issue a levies clearance
certificate until all amounts due have been
paid, and since the section on which the Body Corporate relies for
the embargo, refers
to ‘all the amounts due’, the court
has to ultimately decide what ‘all the amounts due’
means. The applicant
has a quarrel with the notion that the embargo
provision gives the Body Corporate the right to refuse to issue the
certificate
until all moneys due have been paid, as if it somehow
trumps the ordinary laws of the land that says a debt prescribes
after three
(3) years.
[15]
The applicant’s proposition is that
there is nothing in the STA that suggests that prescription does not
apply. If it had
been intended that prescription would not apply to
section 15B(3) of the STA, it would have been written into the
statute, which
came into operation after the Prescription Act, or the
Prescription Act would have been amended.
[16]
According to the applicant, the embargo
provision upon which the Body Corporate seeks to depend for its
argument that the applicant
must pay all the moneys due, does not
amount to an extra entitlement on the part of the Body Corporate to
claim against the prospective
purchaser amounts that it could not sue
the second respondent for if the second respondent had not sold the
unit in the first place.
That, the applicant submits, makes no
commercial sense.
[17]
The applicant concedes that the embargo
provision is a real right but argues that the real right should not
be conflated with the
qualification or understanding of what ‘all
the moneys due’ to the Body Corporate means. A distinction,
according to
the applicant, must be made between the right to refuse
to issue the certificate, which is a real right, and the notion of
the
debt. The fact that there is a real right enshrined in the
embargo does not mean that the Body Corporate levies do not amount to
a debt which, in the ordinary course of events, prescribes, so the
applicant submits.
[18]
In
reinforcing its argument that the levy debt is a debt which
prescribes, the applicant referred to section 3(2) of the Sectional
Titles Scheme Management Act,
[6]
which provides that:
“
liability
for contributions levied under any provision of subsection (1), save
for special contributions contemplated by subsection
(4), accrues
from the passing of a resolution to that effect by the trustees of
the body corporate, and may be recovered by the
body corporate by an
application to an ombud from the persons who were owners of units at
the time when such resolution was passed:
Provided that upon the
change of ownership of a unit, the successor in title becomes liable
for the pro rata payment of such contributions
from the date of
change of such ownership.”
According to the
applicant, in terms of this subsection, there is no doubt that a levy
is a debt which is recoverable by the trustees
of a body corporate or
the ombud.
[19]
The
applicant contends further that the decision in
Bradley
Scott Real Estate CC v Serengeti Exclusive Estate Home Owners
Association NPC and Others (“Bradley Scott”)
,
[7]
on which the Body Corporate relies for its contention that a levy
debt does not prescribe, is not a definitive statement of law
that
prescription does not apply to levy debts. There is, actually, no
authority for the proposition that a levy debt does not
prescribe
other than the one in
Bradley
Scott
,
where the judge therein, stops short of saying that levy debt does
not prescribe. None of the cases referred to by the Body Corporate
supports this proposition, so it was argued.
[20]
A further argument is that, even though the
Body Corporate had a right against the second respondent to claim for
moneys which were
due to it, it must still show that the moneys are
due to it by the transferor, and if they are not due, it does not
have a legitimate
basis to refuse to issue the certificate. The
arrear levies of more than three (3) years in the hands of the second
respondent,
do prescribe.
The Body Corporate’s
case
[21]
The Body Corporate’s point of
departure is that the applicant seeks to afford itself rights, for
example, that of prescription,
that relates to a debt that accrues to
the registered owner of the property, which the applicant is not. The
registered owner of
the property in this instance is the second
respondent and not the applicant. It is the Body Corporate’s
contention that
the party to whom the right of the defence of
prescription speaks is not the applicant, but the applicant seeks to
afford itself
and accrue those rights to itself. As is trite,
prescription cannot be raised
mero motu
by the court, and in this instance, it must be raised by the
registered owner of the property, so the Body Corporate argues.
[22]
According
to the Body Corporate, this point has been dealt with and disposed of
by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Body
Corporate of Marsh Rose v Steinmuller and Others (“Rose
Marsh”).
[8]
[23]
The Body Corporate submits, further, that
section 15B(3)(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of the STA provides that the Registrar of Deeds shall not register a
transfer of a unit unless a body corporate has certified
that all
moneys due to it by the transferor in respect of the said unit have
been paid. The contention is that in terms of the
said section, a
body corporate is the entity which must indicate whether moneys are
due to it and how much. Only when all that
money, as indicated by the
body corporate to be due to it, has been paid, can the registration
of transfer proceed. If not, the
property transfer shall not be
registered.
[24]
The
Body Corporate argues further that the relief sought by the
applicant, by way of mandamus or mandatory interdict, is baseless
in
that section 15B(3)(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of the STA, which is an embargo provision, does not, as incorrectly
averred by the applicant, place an obligation on the Body
Corporate,
and does not create any entitlement by the applicant to compel the
Body Corporate to comply to issue a clearance certificate
for the
transfer of the unit. The statutory embargo provided by the section
serves a vital and legitimate purpose as effective
security for debt
recovery in respect of contributions to a Body Corporate for,
inter
alia
,
administration, security, insurance, water, electricity, rates and
taxes. Thus, the section ensures the continued supply of such
services and the economic viability and sustainability of a body
corporate in the interest of all its members,
[9]
so it was argued.
[25]
The Body Corporate highlights the fact that
it is not a party to the agreement of sale entered into between the
applicant and the
second respondent’s liquidators, and cannot
be bound by any terms and conditions thereof as was clearly attempted
in clause
4.4 thereof which reads:
"...authorising the
purchaser to liaise with the body corporate to settle the quantum of
the arrears due and payable to the
body corporate in terms of which
the body corporate agrees to accept an agreed sum for purposes of the
issue of the necessary levy
clearance certificate required for
purposes of transfer…”
[26]
Not being a party to the agreement and the
seller not having the authority to bind the Body Corporate, the Body
Corporate did not
agree to anything, least of all to accept any sum
other than the full amount due and payable to it. The terms and
conditions contained
in clause 4.5 of the agreement of sale, that the
applicant will be liable for and shall pay the Body Corporate the
agreed sum in
clause 4.4 in order to obtain the certificate required
from the Body Corporate for transfer, is an agreement between the
second
respondent's liquidators and the applicant only. The first
respondent, as a non-party to the agreement, cannot be bound to have
agreed to only part-payment of monies due and payable to it. The
applicant is liable and must pay the full amount as determined
by the
Body Corporate and will not only be liable and have to pay "for
an agreed sum", so it was argued.
[27]
The agreement is between the second
respondent's liquidators and the applicant, and any damages the
applicant may suffer, having
to pay the Body Corporate more than what
was agreed on between the second respondent's liquidators and the
applicant, must be recovered
by the applicant from the second
respondent and its liquidators. It is only when the dispute has been
dealt with and the amount
so determined has been paid in full, that
the Body Corporate can issue a clearance certificate and can the
property be transferred
at the Deeds Office, so it was argued by the
Body Corporate. In this instance, as well, the Body Corporate found
support for its
proposition that an agreement entered into by the
liquidators of the second respondent and the applicant cannot bind
it, in
Rose Marsh
.
Applicable law
[28]
In terms of section 15B(3)(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of the STA, the Registrar of Deeds is prohibited from registering the
transfer of a unit in a sectional title scheme unless there
is a
conveyancer certificate confirming that a body corporate has
certified that all moneys due to the body corporate by the transferor
in respect of the said unit have been paid, or that provision has
been made to the satisfaction of the body corporate for the payment
thereof.
[29]
As a general proposition, a body corporate,
like the first respondent, is permitted to prevent transfer of a unit
in a sectional
title development from one owner to another in the
absence of it issuing a certificate confirming that all levies and
other amounts
due by the owner who intends selling a unit in the
development, have been paid. In essence, a body corporate will not
issue a levy
clearance certificate unless all the amounts due are
fully paid.
[30]
Section
15B(3)(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of the STA contemplates and creates an embargo or veto provision as
general security for the payment of debt to the body corporates.
The
practical effect of the section is that a body corporate will be paid
all amounts due to it before a clearance certificate
can be issued
and transfer of immovable property is effected. The effect of the
section is merely to secure payment of the claim.
The embargo in this
section has been held to be akin to the embargo contained in section
118(2) of the Local Government: Municipal
Systems Act. 32 0f
2000.
[10]
Discussion
[31]
The
application is about the interpretation of section 15B(3)(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of the STA in the context of liquidation. For a property in a
sectional title scheme to be transferred into the name of a
purchaser,
the body corporate must issue a levies clearance
certificate. The provisions of section 15B(3)(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of the STA, however, entitle a body corporate to refuse to issue such
certificate until all moneys owed to it in respect of the
property
have been paid, or provision has been made, to the satisfaction of
the body corporate, for the payment thereof.
[11]
[32]
As
concluded by the court in
Willow
Waters Homeowners Association,
[12]
there are two separate rights, one, a personal right for the arrear
levies, the second, a real right in respect of the embargo.
The
personal right for the claim of moneys against the second respondent
must be separated from the real right embargo to refuse
the issuing
of a levies clearance certificate as set out in section
15B
(3)(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of
the STA.
[33]
There
is actually, correctly so, no dispute between the parties that the
Prescription Act does not apply to the embargo provided
for in
section 15B(3)(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of the STA, which, as already stated, has been held to be a real
right. The section, as it has been held, only affords protection
to
the body corporate in that it serves a vital and legitimate purpose
as effective security for debt recovery in respect of contributions
to a body corporate for,
inter
alia
,
administration, security, insurance, water, electricity, rates and
taxes. Thus, ensuring the continued supply of such services
and the
economic viability and sustainability of a body corporate in the
interest of all its members.
[13]
[34]
The Body Corporate has steadfastly
maintained that it is entitled to withhold the levy clearance
certificate on the basis that the
applicant is liable to it in
respect of all arrear levies and other charges from 2016, whilst the
applicant maintains that its
obligation corresponds only to the
period of three (3) years predating its application to court. The
applicant tenders to make
payment of all amounts legally due to the
Body Corporate in respect of all arrear levies and electricity
charges since 6 February 2017.
In its case, the applicant
denies its indebtedness for the full sum of the arrears, alleging
it's liability for arrear levies is
limited by prescription. Relying
on
Bradley Scott
,
it was argued on behalf of the Body Corporate that there is no
authority that levies prescribe.
[35]
The question, in my understanding, is
whether the applicant, as a prospective purchaser of a unit in a
sectional titles scheme,
can avail itself of the right of a defence
of prescription that relates to a debt that accrues to the registered
owner of the said
unit. The applicant’s argument is that a
prospective purchaser can avail itself of a defence of prescription
that relates
to a debt that accrues to the registered owner, whereas
the Body Corporate’s view is that the prospective purchaser
cannot
avail itself of such a defence. In my opinion, the judgment in
Bradley Scott
,
to which the applicant referred to in oral argument, confirms the
Body Corporate’s view.
[36]
In
Bradly
Scott,
the
applicant, through a declaratory relief, wanted the court to declare
that a certain amount stated in the notice of motion is
owed to the
second and third respondents as joint liquidators of the owner of the
properties in question. The applicant sought
such a relief on the
basis that any moneys owed to the respondents for a period of longer
than three years had become prescribed
and could therefore no longer
be due and payable. Clause C
3
of
the title deeds of the properties in question imposed a condition on
the owner of the properties that:
[14]
”
The
owner of the erf, or any subdivision thereof, or of any sectional
title unit erected thereon shall not be entitled to transfer
the erf,
or any portion thereof, or any unit, without prior written
confirmation of the association that all amounts due to the
association by the owner have been paid.”
[37]
The court, when dismissing the application,
made the following finding:
“
[21]
I am therefore not persuaded that Applicant’s approach in
calculating the amount of levies by
it to First Respondent is
correct. The right that First Respondent has in terms of the embargo
provision is a right to veto in
terms of the embargo which restricts
the owners
ius disponendi.
It is this right of the First Respondent that is at stake here, which
is a real right, and Applicant has no right to curtail First
Respondent’s real right by means of a declaratory order wherein
the method of calculation of the levies due, as applied by
Applicant,
should prevail.”
[38]
From this finding, it is clear that the
court was in agreement with the Body Corporate that “
all
amounts due
” do not prescribe,
and that a defence of prescription cannot be used to curtail the real
right that has been created in terms
of section 15B(3)
(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of the STA.
[39]
Fundamentally,
what should be noted in
Bradley
Scott
is
that the applicant is a prospective purchaser. This is in contrast to
the cases where the applicant is the registered owner like
in
Ashu
and Another v Body Corporate, London Place and Others (“London
Place”),
[15]
and
Body
Corporate of the Santa Fe Sectional Title Scheme
No
61/1994
v
Bassonia Four Zero Seven CC (“Santa Fe”)
.
[16]
In both these cases, the applicant, as a registered owner of the
property, relied on the issue of prescription. The court made
a
finding that historic arrear levies prescribes. Noteworthy is that
the applicants in both these cases are registered owners and
not
prospective purchasers like in
Bradley
Scott
.
[40]
In
London
Place
, the court held that historic
arrear levies do prescribe. In arriving at such a decision, the court
took into consideration the
provisions of section 13(1)(e) of the
Prescription Act, which provides for a delay of prescription in a
situation where a debtor
could influence the decision of a juristic
person to sue him or her. Section 13(1)(e) provides that prescription
is delayed until
one year after the unit owner ceases to be a member
of the body corporate.
[41]
The
court dealt with the question of who is “
a
member of the governing body
”
for the purposes of sections 13(1)(e) and (i) of the Prescription Act
in relation to its application to body corporates.
The question being
whether a member of the governing body refers only to the trustees of
a body corporate or to the unit owners
themselves who are members of
the body corporate. That court made a finding that the unit owners
are not members of the governing
body in that context, but the
trustees are. The court, in this regard, fortified its reasoning by
relying on the decision taken
in
Body
Corporate of 22 West Road South v Ergold Property Number 8 CC,
[17]
which court was of the view that only trustees, and not unit owners,
constitute the governing body of a body corporate. As a result,
the
court in
London
Place
ruled
that levy debts owing by the unit owners to the body corporate had
already prescribed as the unit owners were not trustees.
[42]
In
Santa Fe
,
the body corporate applied for liquidation of the respondent unit
owner (a close corporation), based on outstanding arrear levies
due
to it in respect of two units owned by the respondent in the
Santa
Fe
Sectional Title Scheme. The unit
owner argued that the outstanding levies had prescribed in terms of
section 11(d) of the Prescription
Act, which provides that ‘
the
period of prescription of debts shall be, save where an Act of
Parliament provides otherwise, three years in respect of any
other
debt’.
In dismissing the
application, the court found, amongst others, that the underlying
debt had prescribed.
[43]
From the above authorities, it is clear
that a levy debt in the circumstances where the applicant is the
prospective purchaser is
not limited by prescription. The prospective
purchaser cannot avail itself of the right of a defence of
prescription that relates
to a debt that accrues to the registered
owner. It is on that basis that this point of the applicant should
fail.
[44]
The
argument by the applicant that the STA does not state that
prescription does not apply has no merit. There was no need, in the
first place, for the STA to mention that prescription does not apply
because if the legislature had intended it to be so, it would
have
mentioned it. The interpretation that the applicant wants to accord
to the STA fails to align with the
Endumeni
principles as to the proper interpretation of legislation.
[18]
The applicant’s interpretation makes no business sense.
[45]
Even if I have come to a wrong decision in
respect of the prescription of arrear levy debt, the applicant still
has not made out
a proper case for the relief it seeks in this
matter. It has, in my view, failed to show that the Body Corporate is
bound by the
agreement of sale that was concluded by it (the
applicant) and the liquidators of the second respondent.
[46]
It is common cause that the applicant
purchased the unit that is owned by the second respondent from the
liquidators of the second
respondent. An agreement of sale for such a
purchase was concluded on 6 February 2020. It is also not
in dispute that
at the time of the conclusion of the sale agreement,
the second respondent was indebted to the Body Corporate for arrear
levies
and consumption of electricity. This became a term of the
agreement of sale. The applicant, in signing the agreement of sale,
bound
itself as liable to settle the quantum of the arrear levies due
and payable to the Body Corporate in terms of which the Body
Corporate
agrees to accept an agreed sum for purposes of transfer.
[47]
It is not disputed that there was no
specific amount that was declared by the liquidators of the second
respondent when the agreement
of sale was concluded. The applicant
was to enter into an agreement with the Body Corporate as to the
amount that was due and payable
for purposes of transfer. However, no
such agreement has been concluded. The Body Corporate is enforcing
the embargo provision
in terms of section 15B(3
)(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of the STA and wants all the moneys due and
payable to it to be paid before it can provide the applicant with the
certificate required
for purposes of transfer.
[48]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Rose
Marsh,
dealing with a similar
situation, although in that case the seller was the Sheriff, held as
follows:
“
[25]
Mr Steinmuller’s right to take transfer of the property arises
from contract. He only acquires
an enforceable right upon fulfilment
of the conditions of sale. His right operates against the sheriff,
and not the body corporate.
It is the sheriff who must determine
whether Mr Steinmuller has fulfilled his obligations. And if he has
not fulfilled his obligations,
then it is for the sheriff to enforce
the contractual obligations or cancel the sale.
[26]
The body corporate is not a party to the agreement of sale. The fact
that clause 4.4.2
of the conditions of sale refers to ‘levies’
and not, as in the language of s 15B(3)(
a
)(i)(
aa
), to
‘all moneys’ due to the body corporate, can have no legal
bearing upon the rights of the body corporate. The embargo
confers
upon the body corporate a statutory right to resist transfer of a
unit in the scheme until all monies due to it have been
paid or it is
satisfied that arrangements for their payment have been made.
[27]
In
Barnard NO v Regspersoon van Aminie en ‘n ander,
the
question arose whether the embargo covered not only arrear levies and
interest, but legal costs incurred by a body corporate
in seeking to
recover amounts due to it by the owner of a unit. This court held
that the legislature intended to give to a body
corporate effective
protection. It reasoned that a body corporate was merely a collective
of owners of units who shared expenses.
If one owner fails to meet
their obligations, the burden fell on others, hence the need for an
effective remedy. This court concluded
that legal costs incurred in
recovery of amounts due to the body corporate fell within the ambit
of the protection afforded by
s 15B(3)(
a
) of the Act.
[28]
Assuming, therefore, that the conditions of sale limit what Mr
Steinmuller is contractually
bound to pay (as was contended by him in
disputing the account of the body corporate), his payment of that
limited amount might
entitle him to demand that the sheriff give
transfer. He cannot, however, demand that the
body corporate
should accept his limited payment and therefore provide a clearance
certificate upon which transfer could occur. That is so, for
the
simple reason that unless the contract of sale binds the body
corporate, its statutory right remains unaltered. Mr Steinmuller’s
contractual right to transfer cannot limit the body corporate’s
statutory right to refuse to issue a clearance certificate
until all
moneys due to it are paid.
[29]
To give transfer, the sheriff must obtain a conveyancer’s
certificate that all moneys
due to the body corporate have been paid.
The body corporate would, as a matter of law, remain entitled to
refuse to provide the
certificate until the conditions of the embargo
are met. There could be no suggestion that it was acting unreasonably
or unlawfully.
The only question that could then arise is whether the
conditions of sale, stipulated by Standard Bank and published prior
to the
sale in execution, bind the body corporate. That was not,
however, what this case was about. The effect is that, whatever
dispute
there may notionally be regarding what is due to the body
corporate, it is not a dispute to which Mr Steinmuller is a party. He
has no legal interest in that dispute.
[30]
His right to compel transfer of the property lay against the sheriff.
To obtain it he was
required to establish that he had met the
conditions stipulated by the contracting party. Mr Steinmuller,
however, sought no relief
against the sheriff. . . ” (footnotes
omitted)
[49]
From the above passages, it is clear that
the applicant approached the wrong party for relief. As has been held
in
Rose Marsh
,
the applicant’s
right to take
transfer of the property arises from contract. It only acquires an
enforceable right upon fulfilment of the conditions
of sale. Its
right, therefore, operates against the liquidators and not the Body
Corporate.
[50]
That court held further that the body
corporate is not a party to the agreement of sale. In the
circumstances of the current matter,
the fact that clause 4.4. of the
terms of the agreement of sale appears to bind the Body Corporate to
agree to accept an agreed
sum for purposes of the transfer, the Body
Corporate, as a nonparty to the agreement, is not bound by any term
of that agreement
and is entitled to refuse to agree to any amount
suggested by the applicant. The embargo provision confers upon it a
statutory
right to resist transfer of a unit in the scheme until all
moneys due to it have been paid or it is satisfied that arrangements
for their payment have been made.
[51]
The limited amount that the applicant
wants to pay might entitle it to demand transfer of the unit from the
liquidators. It
cannot, however, demand that the Body Corporate
should accept its limited payment and therefore provide a clearance
certificate
upon which transfer could occur. The simple reason for
this has been held to be that unless the agreement of sale binds the
Body
Corporate, its statutory right remains unaltered. The
applicant’s contractual right to transfer cannot limit the Body
Corporate’s
statutory right to refuse to issue a clearance
certificate until all moneys due to it are paid. The applicant’s
right to
compel transfer of the property lay against the liquidators
and not the Body Corporate.
[52]
The question that should be asked is
whether the Body Corporate is a party to the agreement of sale, and
if the answer is in the
negative, as it should be, then the
application stands to be dismissed.
[53]
Furthermore, this being interdictory
relief, the applicant is not before the court hamstrung, without an
alternative remedy. It
has other remedies. It could have, and should
have, sued the joint liquidators for specific performance for
delivery of the unit.
This, it could have done, for instance, by
requesting the liquidators of the second respondent to provide it
with the certificate
required to register the transfer. It could
have, as well, cancelled the agreement and sought restitution. In
essence, the applicant
should look to the seller, that is, the second
respondent’s liquidators for relief for any damages that it may
suffer having
to pay the Body Corporate more than what was agreed
between them.
[54]
A
liquidator has, in the ordinary course of winding up, a duty to sell
the company’s property and to ensure delivery of such
property
to the purchaser. In terms of section 386(4)(h) of the Companies
Act,
[19]
a liquidator has the
power to sell any movable and immovable property of the company by
public auction, public tender or private
contract and to give
delivery thereof. In
Stern,
NO v Standard Trading Co (Pty) Ltd
,
[20]
it was held that where assets sold by a liquidator are in the
possession of third parties, the liquidator ordinarily would be
obliged to deliver them to the purchaser and to that end, to procure
their release from the third party.
[55]
The interdictory relief the applicant seeks
does not pass muster.
Costs
[56]
As is trite, the issue of costs lies within
the discretion of the court. The successful party should be awarded
its costs of litigation.
In this case, the successful party is the
Body Corporate. The parties agree, at least on one issue, that is,
the costs of litigation
should be on scale C, which the Body
Corporate is praying for.
[57]
Rule 67A(3)(b) of the Uniform Rules of
Court provides that in considering the factors to award an
appropriate scale of costs, the
court may have regard to: the
complexity of the matter and the value of the claim or importance of
the relief sought.
[58]
I am in agreement with the parties that
scale C should be allowed in this matter. This is a complex matter
that is of importance,
and in-depth preparation and research was
required.
Order
[59]
In the premises I make the following order:
1.
The application is
dismissed.
2.
The applicant is ordered
to pay the costs of the application on scale
C.
E M KUBUSHI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicant:
P Strathern SC
Instructed
by:
Strauss
Scher Incorporation
For
the First Respondent:
P
A Venter
Instructed
by:
Carel
Van Der Merwe Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
07
August 2024
Date
of judgment:
13 March 2025
[1]
Act 95 of 1986.
[2]
Clause 3 of the Agreement of Sale provides that:
“
Risk in and to
the property shall pass to the purchaser on date of payment in 2
from which date the purchaser will be liable for
the payment of
rates and taxes to the Municipality and for the body corporate
levy.”
[3]
Clause 4.5 of the Agreement of Sale provides that:
“
The purchaser
will be liable for and shall pay the body corporate the agreed sum
in 4.4 and in order to obtain the certificate
required from the body
corporate for transfer.”
[4]
Clause 4.4 of the Agreement of Sale provides that:
"It is recorded
that the seller is, at date of signature hereof indebted to the body
corporate of the scheme in respect of
arrear levies. The seller
shall, on its written request furnish the purchaser with a
resolution and power of attorney authorising
the purchaser to liaise
with the body corporate to settle the quantum of the arrears due and
payable to the body corporate in
terms of which the body corporate
agrees to accept an agreed sum for purposes of the issue of the
necessary levy clearance certificate
required for purposes of
transfer and, failing such settlement, authorising the purchaser to
institute whatever litigation it
may be advised is necessary to
procure the issue of such a certificate provided all costs of such
litigation will be borne by
the purchaser."
[5]
Act
68 of 1969.
[6]
Act 8 of 2011.
[7]
[2017] ZAGPJHC 11.
[8]
2024
(2) SA 270
(SCA).
[9]
Willow
Waters Homeowners Association (Pty) Ltd v Koka NO and Others
(“Willow Waters Homeowners Association”)
2015
(5) SA 304
(SCA) at para 25.
[10]
Id at para 24.
[11]
See
Marsh
Rose
above n 8 at para 36.
[12]
Above n 9 at para 23.
[13]
Willow
Waters Homeowners Association
above
n 9 at para 25.
[14]
Bradly
Scott
above
n 7 at para 6.
[15]
2025 (1) SA 147 (WCC).
[16]
[2019] ZAGPJHC 54.
[17]
2014 JDR 2258 (GJ).
[18]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality (“Endumeni”)
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at para 18.
[19]
Act 61 of 1973.
[20]
1955 (3) SA 423
(A) at 428G.
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