Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 757South Africa
Body Corporate of La Mon Villa and Another v Niyakha Group (Pty) Ltd (Appeal) (A27/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 757 (23 July 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Body Corporate of La Mon Villa and Another v Niyakha Group (Pty) Ltd (Appeal) (A27/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 757 (23 July 2025)
Body Corporate of La Mon Villa and Another v Niyakha Group (Pty) Ltd (Appeal) (A27/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 757 (23 July 2025)
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sino date 23 July 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
A270/2023
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
23/07/2025
SIGNATURE:
LENYAI J
In the matter of:
BODY
CORPORATE OF LA MON VILLA
(SS
no 108/2012; 173/2012, 518/2012; 776/2021)
First
Appellant
MELROSE
GARDENS INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Second
Appellant
And
NIYAKHA
GROUP(PTY) LTD
Respondent
IN
RE:
BODY
CORPORATE OF LA MON VILLA
(SS
no 108/2012; 173/2012, 518/2012; 776/2021)
First
Plaintiff
MELROSE
GARDENS INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Second
Plaintiff
And
NIYAKHA
GROUP(PTY) LTD
Defendant
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by
uploading to
Caselines. The date and time of hand-down
is
deemed to be 14:00 on 23 July 2025.
JUDGMENT
LENYAI J ( MUDAU ADJP
and BAQWA J CONCURING)
[1]
This is an appeal against the whole judgment and order granted by the
High Court on
the 18
th
July 2023. The leave to appeal was
granted by the Supreme Court of Appeal on the 10
th
August
2023.
[2]
The appellants contend that the court
a quo
erred in upholding
the exception brought by the respondent on the basis that the
appellants amended particulars of claim lack the
averments necessary
to sustain a cause of action and should have dismissed the exception.
[3]
The appellants aver that they claimed unliquidated damages suffered
by them as a result
of the respondent’s defective,
unworkmanlike and unprofessional construction of the scheme ‘LA
MON VILLA’ in
the amount of R2 082 255.00, due and payable by
the respondent to the first appellant.
[4]
The appellants submit that if regard is had to the exception, the
compliant appears
to be that no cause of action is pleaded or made in
favour of the second appellant. They concede this point, however,
contend that
the second appellant seeks no relief against the
respondent. It is further submitted that the second appellant has
only been
joined to the proceedings because it has a direct and
substantial interest in the outcome of the action.
[5]
The appellants contend that the fact that the prayer at the end of
the particulars
of claim states that the “
Plaintiffs pray
for judgment against defendant”
is of little consequence.
The substantive relief sought as opposed to the preface to the
relief, is for “
Payment by the Defendant to the First
Plaintiff in the amount of R2 082 255.00.”
[6]
The appellants aver that the particulars of claim do set out the
averments necessary
to sustain a cause of action by the first
appellant against the respondent. They submit that in this regard,
the first appellant’s
claim is clear and unambiguous in the
particulars of claim:
6.1
The first appellant is the body corporate of a sectional title scheme
known as “LA
MON VILLA”;
6.2
As the body corporate, it is responsible for the maintenance, upkeep
and repair of the common
property of the sectional title scheme in
terms of Section 3(1) of the Sectional Title Scheme Management Act 8
of 2011 (STSMA);
6.3
The respondent was the developer of the scheme;
6.4
The respondent constructed the scheme in a defective, unworkmanlike
and unprofessional manner;
6.5
The Respondent’s conduct was wrongful
per se
in that its
conduct caused physical damage to the common property of the scheme,
in which case wrongfulness is presumed;
6.6
Alternately, the appellants contend that the respondent owed a legal
duty to the public
to construct the scheme in a professional and
workmanlike manner, which legal duty is breached. This breach of
legal duty was thus
wrongful;
6.7
As a result of the respondent’s intentional, alternatively
negligent and wrongful
construction of the scheme as aforesaid, the
first appellant became obliged to effect repairs to the common
property of the scheme
in accordance with its statutory duties;
6.8
The cost of repairs in respect of the defective works, that is the
first appellant’s
damages is R2 082 255,00, for which the
respondent is liable to the first appellant.
[7]
The appellants aver that the first appellant’s claim against
the respondent
is thus clearly and unequivocally one arising in
delict. The body corporate’s right to proceed against a
developer for the
defective construction of a sectional title scheme
has been recognized by the courts.
[8]
The appellants contend that the respondent’s complaints against
the first appellant’s
claim are wide and varied. Firstly, the
respondent denies that the first appellant has an obligation for the
care and maintenance
of the common property. They aver that this is
simply incorrect, the first appellant as the Body Corporate of the
scheme:
8.1
Is responsible for the administration and management of the common
property for the benefit
of all the owners of units in the scheme in
terms of sections 2(5) and 3(1)(t) of the STSMA;
8.2
Is liable to be sued by owners for damage to the common property in
terms of section 2(7)
of the STSMA;
8.3
Is liable for the repair, maintenance, management and administration
of the common property,
including reasonable provision for future
maintenance and repairs in terms of section 3(1)(a) of the STSMA;
8.4
Must maintain all the common property and keep it in a state of good
and serviceable repair
in terms of section 3(1)(I) of the STSMA.
[9]
Secondly, the respondent alleges that the particulars of claim
inaccurately state
that the repairs relate to the common property but
complains that the report shows that the costs for repairs do not “
at
least to the full extent there”
relate to the common
property.
[10]
The appellants aver that if regard is had to the report, it is clear
that it speaks to damage
to the common property. The particulars of
claim at paragraph 17, makes it clear and unequivocal that the first
appellant is seeking
damages from the respondent only for the repairs
necessary “
to the common property … caused by the
Defendant’s intentional, alternatively negligent and wrongful
act in constructing
the scheme in a defective manner as set out
above.”
Furthermore, the appellants submit that it must be
accepted that there was in fact damage to the common property and
that the first
appellant’s claim relates to that. Whether the
appellants will be able to prove their claim at trial in due course
is not
relevant at this stage.
[11]
Thirdly, the respondent makes an allegation in the exception
application at paragraph 2.14, that the repairs
that the first
appellant is obliged to effect are to “
remove alleged
defects”
and “
cannot relate to ‘care
and maintenance’ for which the First Appellant is allegedly
liable.”
[12]
The appellants submit that the allegation seems to suggest that the
obligations placed on the first appellant
as contemplated by the
STSMA do not require it to repair defects to the common property.
They contend that this is simply incorrect
as the wording of the
STSMA requires the first appellant to attend to the care, maintenance
and repair of the common property.
[13]
Fourthly, the respondent makes an allegation that the damages were
suffered by the second appellant
and not the first appellant. The
allegation made is that the appellants are attempting to pursue an
action against the respondent
to ”
recover the damages which
the Second Appellant was supposed to have recovered, but which the
Second Appellant cannot recover given
the fact that it concluded a
sale agreement with a voetstoots clause.”
[14]
The appellants aver that the respondent bases this allegation on the
background facts pleaded
by them relating to the sale agreements
concluded between the respondent and the second appellant. The
appellants contend that
if regard is had to these facts, it is clear
that they are made to foreshadow why they obtained the Curasure
report which evidenced
the defective construction works performed by
the respondent on the common property. Furthermore, the
agreements between
the second appellant and the respondent in no way
evidence that the damages were suffered by the second appellant. The
second appellant
purchased the units in the scheme from the
respondent and did not purchase the common property.
[15]
The appellants aver that the first appellant’s claim is for the
damage to the common property
and not to any individual unit in the
scheme. Accordingly, the allegation that the damages are “
clearly
damages which the Second Appellant will be suffering”
is
incorrect.
[16]
The appellants contend that in support of its allegation that the
claim really belongs to the
second appellant, the respondent attached
a co-operation agreement to its exception application. They aver that
this is improper
as no extraneous facts can be adduced to show that
the pleading is excipiable. The contractual relationship between the
appellants
cannot harm or benefit the respondent.
[17]
The appellants submit that if regard is had to the co-operation
agreement, it is clear that they
acknowledge that the first appellant
is obliged to maintain and repair the common property. The second
appellant is simply providing
the financial assistance to the first
appellant to fund the legal action against the respondent. The
agreement does not evidence
that the damages were suffered by the
second appellant, it simply evidences that the second appellant is
paying for the costs of
the action. Furthermore, it is submitted that
it is trite that the respondent cannot rely on a contract to which it
is not privy.
[18]
The appellants contend that there is nothing irregular about the
second appellant funding the
legal action against the respondent.
They aver that if the first appellant is unable to recover the
damages from the respondent,
the second appellant as the owner of
vast majority of the units in the scheme, would have to fund the
repairs to the common property.
[19]
The appellants submit that the particulars of claim expressly make
the necessary averments to
sustain a delictual claim against the
respondent and have also adduced documentary proof evidencing at
least
prima facie
the respondent’s defective
construction of the scheme.
[20]
The appellants aver that the complaint by the respondent that the
particulars of claim “
does not disclose a proper cause of
action to make an allegation that the Respondent intentionally,
alternatively negligently and
wrongfully constructed a scheme”
because there is “
no indication what the Respondent
intended to achieve and the allegation that the Respondent acted with
intent is devoid of any
particularity about what the Respondent
intended to achieve”
is equally without merit.
[21]
The appellants contend that this complaint by the respondent concerns
the
facta probantia,
which is the evidence necessary to
support the primary facts. They submit that they do not need to give
particularity as to what
the respondent intended to achieve. All they
need to allege is the
facta probanda,
which are those facts
which if proven, would sustain a claim against the respondent.
[22]
The appellants submit that all the primary facts have been pleaded,
that is the five essential
elements of a delictual claim which
are conduct, wrongfulness, fault, causation and damages. These facts
have been evidenced in
the form of the reports attached to the
particulars of claim. Furthermore, they submit that the only fact
that requires some additional
clarification is that of wrongfulness.
It is submitted that it is settled law that if wrongfulness cannot be
inferred, the plaintiff
(appellant) must allege that the defendant
(respondent) had a legal duty to the plaintiff which legal duty has
been breached. The
appellants aver that the wrongfulness can be
presumed because the respondent’s conduct caused damage to the
common property.
[23]
The appellants further submit that, in the alternative, it is pleaded
that the respondent:
23.1
owed the first appellant a legal duty to construct the scheme
in a professional and workmanlike manner,
and ensure that the scheme
was free of defects;
23.2
breached this legal duty and
23.3
rendered its conduct wrongfully.
[24]
The appellants submit that the above detailed legal duty is
recognized in our law, and the Supreme
Court of Appeal has affirmed
that the body corporate has a right to claim damages against a
developer for defective design and
construction of the structures on
the common property.
[25]
The appellants contend that there is no ambiguity to the particulars
of claim. It is settled
law that the defendant (respondent) cannot
complain about less than perfect pleadings in order to raise
technical and formal objections
unless it causes prejudice to the
defendant. They submit that the respondent has not claimed any
prejudice and the respondent knows
precisely what case it must meet.
[26]
The appellants submit that the argument by the respondent that they
should have rather brought
an application to amend their particulars
of claim instead of bringing an appeal is rather belated.
[27]
The appellants submitted in court that the court should uphold the
appeal of the first appellant and the
respondent be ordered to pay
the costs of the main exception, the application for leave to appeal,
the petition to the Supreme
Court of Appeal and the costs of the Full
Court Appeal. The appeal of the second appellant should be dismissed
with each party
paying their own costs.
[28]
The respondent submits that the appellants have conceded that the
second appellant does not have
a cause of action against it and that
there is in fact only a cause of action pursued on behalf of the
first appellant. It is further
submitted that the second appellant is
the driving force behind the litigation as it is funding the first
appellant’s litigation
against it. It is submitted that this is
a case of misjoinder as the second appellant should not have been
added to the matter
from the onset.
[29]
The respondent contends that the first appellant in the particulars
of claim is claiming damages
of the property belonging to the second
appellant. It is submitted that there is no resolution authorizing
the first appellant
to claim on behalf of the second appellant. It is
therefore impermissible for the first appellant to recover damages on
behalf
of the second appellant.
[30]
The respondent contends that it is clear that the damages dealt with
in the particulars of claim
relate to the construction of the units,
and suddenly in paragraph 14 of the particulars of claim the common
property is introduced
as part of the damages.
[31]
The respondent avers that it is expressly alleged in paragraph 1.2 of
the particulars of claim that the
first appellant is the owner of the
common property in the scheme. It is then also alleged that the first
appellant is responsible
for the maintenance, upkeep and repair of
the common property. Furthermore, it must be trite that the common
property is in fact
owned by all the unit owners who each have an
undivided share in the common property.
[32]
The respondent submits that ownership of the common property is to be
distinguished from the
duty of the Body Corporate to maintain the
common property. It is further submitted that the kind of alleged
damages which the
first appellant is attempting to recover from it
are not anticipated expenses for maintenance, upkeep or repair, but
in fact relate
to the alleged costs for the complete redesign and
reconstruction of the entire property, including the units owned by
the second
appellant.
[33]
The respondent contends that it is abundantly clear that the costs in
the reports do not, at
least to the full extent thereof, relate only
to the common property. If the costs relate to the individual units,
then the second
appellant and not the first appellant should have
been the one attempting to make a recovery from it.
[34]
The respondent submits that clearly the damages relate to the entire
scheme, or at the very least
the units, but the first appellant’s
duty is only with reference to the common property, where the focus
is on care and maintenance.
[35]
The respondent contends that the first appellant failed to allege a
foundation for the broad
legal duty of care it relied upon. It is
submitted that such a broad legal duty of care by a developer to the
public at large is
untenable. It is submitted that in order to make
out a proper case in the pleadings, it is necessary for a party
relying upon a
duty of care to plead all the facts on which it wishes
to rely on to enable the court to decide whether policy
considerations or
the
boni mores
warrants an extension of
liability. It is further submitted that the first appellant had made
extremely sketchy allegations relating
to the existence of a legal
duty of care in paragraph 17B of the particulars of claim.
[36]
The respondent avers that it is wrong for the first appellant to
argue that a Body Corporate’s
right to proceed against a
developer for defective construction of a Sectional Title Scheme,
based upon a legal duty, has been
recognized in a number of matters.
[37]
The respondent submitted in court that the appeal must be dismissed
against both appellants with
costs on a punitive scale as the court
a
quo
had correctly upheld the exception.
[38]
The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in the matter of
Central
Developments Tshwane (Pty) Ltd and Another v Body Corporate, Twee
Riviere Aftree Oord (635/2019)
[2020] ZASCA 107
(21 September 2020)
held that section 2(7)(b) of the STSMA
empowers a body corporate to sue a developer in respect of any
defects in the design and
construction of foundations for structures
situated on the common property, without the need for a special
resolution in
terms of section 2(7)(e) of the STSMA. The court
further clarified that the section enables the body corporate to act
on behalf
of all the unit owners, who jointly hold the common
property in individual shares. Requiring all owners to sue
individually or
jointly would simply be impractical. This statutory
power to sue the body corporate aligns squarely with the obligations
placed
upon the body corporate in terms of sections 3(1)(a)(i) and
3(1)(i) of the STSMA, to maintain, repair and insure the common
property.
The court further emphasised that section 2(7)(b) of the
STSMA affords a body corporate the right to sue for damages to the
common
property regardless of whether the responsible party is the
developer, architect, builder or any other service provider.
[39]
In the matter of
SM Goldstein & Co
(Pty) Ltd v Cathkin Park Hotel (Pty) Ltd and Another 2000 (4) 1019
(SCA) @ para 7
, the SCA stated that:
“…
,
it has to be accepted that in general a builder does have a legal
duty to both the building owner and to third parties to refrain
from
building something which is manifestly unsafe …”
[40]
The SCA in the matter of
Feldman
NO v EMI Music SA (Pty) Ltd/ EMI Publishing SA (Pty) Ltd (268/2008)
[2009] ZASCA 75
;
2010 (1) SA 1
(SCA) ;
[2009] 4 All SA 307
(SCA) 91
June 2009)
@ para 7 held
that :
“…
An
excipient is obliged to confine his complaint to the stated grounds
of his exception. As in Collin, the exceptions here contain
no
mention of non-joinder. They accordingly fell to be decided on the
grounds taken, namely that the particulars of claim did not
contain
averments which founded the claim for relief. Nor in any arguing the
appeals, did counsel for either party present argument
based on the
ground of non-joinder.”
[41]
In the matter of
Ijeoma
and Another v University of Fort Hare (2174/2021) [2023] ZAECMKHC 88
(17 August 2023) @ para 18
the court
held that:
“…
While
pleadings must be drawn carefully, the rules do not require drafting
perfection and courts have been enjoined not to read
them
pedantically.”
[42]
Turning to the matter before us, the appeal by the second appellant
seems to have lost steam.
The appellants have conceded that there is
really no case made out by the second appellant in the particulars of
claim and it is
only cited because it has an interest in the
outcome of the matter as the majority owner of 21 units in the
scheme.
[43]
It was clearly indicated in the matter of
Central
Developments Tshwane
that a body
corporate has the power to act on behalf of all the unit owners
without a resolution as provided for in section 2(7)(b)
of the STSMA.
The explanations given by the appellants for the second appellant to
be a party in the proceedings do not find favour
with me as the first
appellant is statutorily mandated to act on behalf of all the unit
owners in the scheme which includes the
second appellant. I am of the
view that the exception against the second appellant was correctly
upheld by the court
a quo
,
and the appeal of the second appellant stands to be dismissed.
[44]
With regard to the appeal of the first appellant, section 2(7)(b) of
the STSMA and the SCA in
the matter of
Central
Developments Tshwane,
make it clear
that the body corporate has the right and legal standing to sue a
developer for defects and damages in the design
and construction of
foundations for structures situated on the common property. The
first appellant is within its legal rights
to institute action
against the developer and the challenge by the respondent in this
regard is completely misguided.
[45]
The particulars of claim do make averments that there is damage on
the common property, and it
is the responsibility of the first
appellant to maintain, repair and insure the common property.
The challenge by the respondent
that the first appellant made
extremely sketchy allegations relating to the existence of a legal
duty of care in of the particulars
of claim is of no moment. It is
trite that the pleadings do not have to be perfectly or elegantly
drafted. All that is required
is for the pleadings to be clear so
that the defendant knows the case it is required to answer to.
[46]
Lest we forget, in the particulars of claim, the plaintiff only has
to allege the material facts
that it must prove to support its case
(
facta probanda).
These are the core allegations that form the
basis of its claim. The first appellant has done that in its
particulars of claim.
The challenge by the respondent seems to
suggest that the first appellant needed to allege the
(facta
probantia),
which are the facts presented as evidence to prove
the material facts, especially with regard to the allegation of duty
of care.
[47]
On proper consideration of the particulars of claim, the arguments by
the parties, the STSMA
and the stated case law in the judgment,
I am convinced that the particulars of claim do make out the
necessary averments
to sustain a cause of action by the first
appellant against the respondent.
[48]
Under the circumstances the following order is made:
1.
The appeal of the first appellant is upheld with costs on scale B;
2.
The order of the court
a quo
is set aside and replaced with
the following:
The
exception against the first plaintiff’s particulars of claim is
dismissed with costs on scale B.
2.
The appeal of the second appellant is dismissed with costs on scale
B.
MMD LENYAI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Appearances
Counsel for
Appellants :
Adv JM
Hoffman
Instructed
by
: Swartz
Weil van der Merwe Greenberg
Counsel for Respondent
: Adv MP
van der Merwe SC
Instructed by
: Couzyn
Hertzog & Horak Attorneys
Date
of hearing
:
23 April 2025
Date
of Judgement
:
23 July 2025
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