Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 620South Africa
Mjejane Game Reserve Homeowners' Association v Community Schemes Ombud Services and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2023/059686) [2025] ZAGPPHC 620 (12 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
12 June 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mjejane Game Reserve Homeowners' Association v Community Schemes Ombud Services and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2023/059686) [2025] ZAGPPHC 620 (12 June 2025)
Mjejane Game Reserve Homeowners' Association v Community Schemes Ombud Services and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2023/059686) [2025] ZAGPPHC 620 (12 June 2025)
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sino date 12 June 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2023-059686
(1) REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
DATE:
12-June-2025
SIGNATURE:
In
matter between
MJEJANE
GAME RESERVE HOMEOWNERS'
ASSOCIATION
Applicant
and
COMMUNITY
SCHEMES OMBUD SERVICES
First
Respondent
ACTING
CHIEF OMBUD
THEMBELIHLE
MBHATHA N.O
Second
Respondent
COMMUNUTY
SCHEME OMBUD SERVICES,
KWA-ZULU
NATAL REGIONAL OFFICE
Third
Respondent
MJEJANE
RIVER LODGE PROPERTY (PTY)LTD
Fourth
Respondent
PETRUS
ZELIE N.O.
Fifth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
ON LEAVE TO APPEAL
LESUFI
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal against my judgement
delivered on the 3
February 2025. The leave to appeal is brought in
terms of Rule 49 of the Uniform Rules read with section 17 of the
Superior Act.
The Applicant filed a notice for leave to appeal on the
11 February 2025. The application is opposed by the First to the
Fifth
Respondent.
[2]
The parties will be referred to as they were in the review
application. However, the
First to the Fifth Respondents will be
referred to collectively as "Respondents"
Background
facts
[3)
On the 21 April 2023, the Fourth Respondent made an application to
the First Respondent,
for dispute resolution by completing a form
("the dispute resolution form") setting out 17 disputes for
conciliation
or arbitration against the Applicant. In the application
to the First Respondent, the Fourth Respondent sought the following
relief
in terms of Section 39 of the Community Schemes Ombud Service
Act 9 of 2011(CSOS Act):
3.1
In terms of the financial issues;
3. 2
Scheme Governance issues:
3.3
Meeting issues;
3.4
General and other issues;
[4]
On the 18
th
of May 2023 the First Respondent, acting
through the Second and/or Third Respondents accepted the application
for the dispute resolution
(under CSOS Application 1237 MP/23)
initiated by the Fourth Respondent.
[5]
The Fourth Respondent to be assisted in the resolution of the
dispute, was requested
by the First Respondent to furnish written
submission regarding the application by the 24
th
of May
2023. On the 25
th
of May 2023 the Fourth Respondent
received an email from the First Respondent informing them that they
failed to provide a response,
accordingly the dispute is therefore
referred directly to Adjudication in terms of Section 48 of the CSOS
Act.
[6]
On the 25
th
of May 2023 the Applicant sent a letter to
Fourth Respondent in response to Section 43 notice in terms of the
CSOS Act, acknowledging
receipt of the copy of the Fourth Respondent
's application for Dispute Resolution dated 21 April 2023.The
Applicant further acknowledged
request for submissions in response to
the application made by the Fourth Respondent on or before 24 May
2023.
[7]
The Applicant informed the First Respondent that they are of the view
that, based
on the relief sought, the application should not have
been entertained by the First Respondent and the First Respondent was
obligated
to reject the application in terms of Section 42 of the
CSOS Act and therefore should have been rejected.
[8]
On the 27
th
of June 2023, the Applicant instituted a
review application before this court seeking
inter alia
that
the First Respondent's decision to accept and refer the Dispute for
Adjudication be reviewed.
Applicant's
grounds of Appeal
[9]
Applicant's grounds for appeal can be summarised as follows:
9.1
The court erred in dismissing the application.
9.2
The court erred in finding that the Applicant did not adduce evidence
of whether decisions
of the Respondents adversely affected its
rights. The court should have found that the Applicant provided facts
that the reference
to adjudication severely impacts its ability to
enforce the Management Rules of the Applicant as a Homeowners
Association for the
benefit of its members.
9.3
The court erred in not considering that the CSOS Act constitutes
public law remedies in
circumstances where the Applicant's MOI and
Management must be afforded preference in respect of private disputes
governed by the
Applicant's Constitution.
9.4
The court erred in not finding that the Fourth Respondents request
for direct reference
to adjudication should at the outset have been
dealt with by a way of conciliation of the CSOS practice directive,
alternatively
private arbitration to the Constitution.
9.5
The court erred in making a finding to the effect that the reference
to the adjudicator
is appropriate manner to deal with the reference
of disputes.
9.6
The court erred in selectively making a finding that the Applicant
did not exhaust remedied
but conversely did not hold the Fourth
Respondent and Fifth Respondents, alternatively the CSOS and Ombud,
to the same standard
of test.
9.7.
The court erred in not considering or finding that the disputes
instituted by the Fourth and
Fifth Respondents must be capable of
resolution in terms of a section 39 order, if not the CSOS and /or
adjudicator do not have
jurisdictions to adjudicate,
9.8
The court erred by not considering that various disputes do not fall
within the jurisdiction
of the Ombud, as conceded by the First to
Third Respondents.
9.9
The court erred in finding that direst reference to an adjudicator
may be ordered if no
conciliation has been invoked, which is contrary
to the Practice Directive requirement in terms of Clause 21.5.
9.10
The court erred in finding that condonation should be allowed,
although most of the disputes fell outside
the 60 -day period in
terms of the Act. The court ignored the rules of natural justice.
9.11
The court erred in making no finding that the matter should be stayed
pending a report to be submitted by
the Fifth Respondent regarding
the verification process and the litigation instituted as a
consequence thereof.
9.12
The court erred by not upholding the sanctity of contracts between
the members to the MOI and Management
Rules, thereby not promoting
good governance of homeowners' associations and not complying with a
pre-emptive dispute resolution
clause contained in the MOI.
[10]
The Primary legal question to be answered by the Appeal court is
10.1
Whether MOI or private agreement between the Applicant and the Fifth
Respondent super cede the CSOS Act or
whether the Fourth Respondents
request for direct reference to adjudication should at the outset
have been dealt with by way of
conciliation of the CSOS practice
directive.
10.2
Whether CSOS has Jurisdiction to refer the matter for adjudication.
[11]
However the Appeal Court is not limited by my summary of legal
questions.
Respondent's
opposition to the Application for leave to appeal
[12]
The application for leave to appeal is vehemently and vigorously
opposed the application. The
basis for opposing being that it is
clear that there was no misdirection by the court
a quo
. In
principle the Respondents abide by my judgement.
Issues
for determination
[13]
Whether this appeal has prospects of success.
Applicable
principles/tests to the adjudication of an application for leave to
appeal and analysis of the ground of appeal
[14]
Rule 49 of the Uniform Rules of Court dictates the form and process
of an application for leave
to appeal and the substantive law
pertaining thereto is to be found in
section 17
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
. The latter Act raised the threshold for the
granting of leave to appeal, so that leave may now only be granted if
there is a reasonable
prospect that the appeal will succeed. The
possibility of another court holding a different view no longer forms
part of the test.
There must be a sound, rational basis for the
conclusion that there are prospects of success on appeal. The
interpretation of the
Rules and the Law has evolved in case law since
2013. In numerous cases, the view is held that the threshold for the
granting of
leave to appeal was raised with the inauguration of the
2013 legislation (Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013). The former
assessment
that authorization for appeal should be granted if "
there
is a reasonable prospect that another court might come to a different
conclusion
" is no longer applicable.
[15]
The words in section 17(1) that: "Leave to appeal may only be
given..." and section
17(1)(a)(i) that: "The appeal would
have a reasonable prospect of success· are peremptory. "If
there is a reasonable
prospect of success" is now that: "May
only be given if there would be a reasonable prospect of success."
A possibility
and discretion were therefore, in the words of the
legislation and consciously so. amended to a mandatory obligatory
requirement
that leave may not be granted if there is no reasonable
prospect that the appeal will succeed. It must be a reasonable
prospect
of success; not that another Court may hold another view.
[16]
The court
a
quo
may
not allow for one party to be unnecessarily put through the trauma
and costs and delay of an appeal. In
Four
Wheel Drive v Rattan N.O.
[1]
the following was ruled by Schippers JA (Lewis JA, Zondi JA, Molemela
JA and Mokgohloa AJA concurring):
"[34] There is a
further principle that the court a quo seems to have overlooked -
leave to appeal should be granted only when
there is 'a sound,
rational basis for the conclusion that there are prospects of success
on appeal'. In the light of its findings
that the Plaintiff failed to
prove locus standi or the conclusion of the agreement, I do not think
that there was a reasonable
prospect of an appeal to this court
succeeding that there was a compelling reason to hear an appeal. In
the result, the parties
were put through the inconvenience and
expense of an appeal without any merit."
[2]
Analysis
and Conclusion
[17]
Lastly, I extensively considered the Heads of Arguments by the
Applicant and the reply by the
Respondents as well as submissions
made. Having read further papers filed, I cannot exclude the
possibility that another court
might come to a different conclusion.
I therefore conclude that there are reasonable prospects of success.
[18]
In the premise, I find that the application for leave to appeal
deserves to be successful and
leave to appeal to Full Bench of this
Division or Supreme court of Appeal is therefore granted.
Costs
[18]
The standard rule in an application for leave to appeal is that the
cost of the appeal is to
be in the cause.
[19]
I find no reason to deviate from the abovementioned standard
principle.
[20]
In the premise I make the following order:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The cost of the appeal is to be In the cause.
3.
The Appeal be heard by the Supreme Court of Appeal
B
LESUFI
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
Adv. J De Beer SC
Instructed
by:
JB
Haasbroek Attorney
For
the Respondents: K.
Mnyandu
Instructed
by:
Lusenga Attorneys
Date
of Hearing: 5 May 2025
Date
of Judgement: 12 June 2025
[1]
2019 (3) SA 451 (SCA).
[2]
Id at para 34.
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