Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 578South Africa
Thoke v Glen Life Properties CC (92664/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 578 (20 June 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Thoke v Glen Life Properties CC (92664/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 578 (20 June 2024)
Thoke v Glen Life Properties CC (92664/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 578 (20 June 2024)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 92664/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
20 June 2024
In
the matter between:
SM
THOKE
Applicant
For
and on behalf of the Sheriff of the High Court:
EKURHULENI
KEMPTON PARK NORTH
(KEMPTON/TEMBISA)
And
GLEN
LIFE PROPERTIES CC
(Reg
No:
2004/047179/23)
Respondent
In
re:
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
TSHEPISO
PERTUNIA PHADU N.O
Defendant
(
ID
NO: 9[...])
(Duly
appointed Executrix in the deceased estate of the late
Modupi
Amos Lehong under Masters Reference No 0[...])
JUDGMENT
SK
Hassim J
[1]
The applicant, the Sheriff for Ekurhuleni
Kempton Park North, applies for an order cancelling the sale in
execution of Unit 2[...]
M[...], 1[...] S[...] Close, Greenstone Hill
Extension 2[...], Edenvale, Gauteng Province (“the property”)
on 19 May
2022. The respondent has withdrawn its opposition to
the cancellation of the sale. The outstanding dispute is the
respondent’s
liability for the costs of the application.
[2]
The
respondent purchased the property at the sale in execution for
R905 000.00. It is common cause that it paid the 10%
deposit required in clause 4.1 of the Conditions of Sale in Execution
(“the Conditions of Sale”) but otherwise failed
to comply
with the Conditions of Sale either timeously, and in some instances
at all. The respondent failed to deliver guarantees
securing
the balance of the purchase price within 2[...] (twenty-one) days of
the sale. The guarantees were provided after
the application
was launched.
[1]
The
respondent also failed to pay the amounts due to the municipality and
the levies due to the body corporate.
[3]
As a result, on or about 12 October 2022,
the applicant launched this application seeking amongst others the
cancellation of the
sale in execution and costs on the
attorney-client scale against the respondent. The application
was enrolled on the unopposed
motion court roll of 18 November 2022.
On 17 November 2022, the respondent delivered a notice of intention
to oppose the
application. Consequently, the application was
removed from the roll and the respondent was ordered to pay the
wasted costs
occasioned by the postponement. On 9 March 2023,
the application was postponed due to the late delivery of the
answering
affidavit. The respondent was ordered to pay the
wasted costs on an opposed basis on an attorney and client scale.
These costs orders are collectively referred to as “the wasted
costs order”.
[4]
Mr Sinwamali, the respondent’s sole
member, has personally been representing the respondent since the
inception of this litigation.
He appears to have prepared the
answering affidavit and he appeared at the hearing before me.
[5]
It is common cause that Mr Sinwamali
informed the applicant’s attorney on 9 November 2023 that due
to financial constraints
the respondent would not persist in opposing
the cancellation of the sale in execution. This constituted
notification of
the withdrawal of the respondent’s opposition
to the application. However, costs were not tendered until 30
May 2024
when Mr Sinwamali sent an e-mail to the applicant’s
attorney to which a “Notice of Withdrawal of Defence”
containing
a tender for the payment of “the wasted costs
occasioned by the applicant either taxed or agreed” was
attached.
The applicant’s attorney informed Mr Sinwamali
in an e-mail sent on 30 May 2024 that the applicant was not amenable
to accepting
the tender for the payment of wasted costs and insisted
on the costs of the application on an attorney and client scale.
[6]
When the application was called before me
the applicant moved amongst others for the following orders against
the respondent:
(a)
Cancellation of the sale in execution as
claimed in prayer 1 of the notice of motion.
(b)
Authority to the Sheriff to retain the
deposit paid by the respondent as claimed in paragraph 3 of the
notice of motion.
(c)
Costs of the application on the
attorney-client scale as claimed in prayer 6 of the notice of motion.
[7]
Mr
Sinwamali opposed the costs order. It became clear from his
submissions that the respondent’s case is that its liability
for costs should be limited up until 9 November 2023. In
support Mr Sinwamali handed to me six (6)
[2]
e-mails
to prove that the applicant’s attorney knew that the respondent
did not intend opposing the application. Five
(5) of these were
sent by the respondent to the applicant’s attorney and one was
sent to him by the applicant’s attorney.
[8]
On their own, these e-mails are misleading
in that they suggest that the e-mail sent on 9 November 2023 remained
unanswered until
30 May 2024. Mr Marais who appeared for the
applicant during his argument brought other e-mails to my attention
to correct
the picture and referred to them in argument. Those
e-mails have been uploaded to CaseLines at my request. I have
had
regard to the e-mails handed up by Mr Sinwamali as well as those
uploaded to CaseLines. A different picture emerges.
[9]
Mr Sinwamali met with the applicant’s
attorney on 9 November 2023. He informed her that the
respondent was agreeable
to the cancellation of the sale in
execution. On the same day at 18h20 he recorded in an e-mail
that the respondent agrees
to the cancellation of the sale. The
applicant was thus entitled to its costs up to 9 November 2023.
The withdrawal
of the opposition has the same effect as a successful
application which would generally entitle an applicant to the costs
of the
application.
[10]
There was no response to the e-mail of 9
November 2023. Nor to the follow up e-mails sent on 13 November
2023 and 1 December
2023 in which Mr Sinwamali sought guidance on the
way forward. My understanding is that he wanted guidance on the
process
in light of the concession that the sale should be
cancelled. The last-mentioned e-mail reads:
“
Please
do respond to our e-mails below. Our previous emails remains
[
sic
]
without your reply although we have communicated our intention to
withdraw any defence/ opposition because of the CSOS
[3]
recommendations.
Please advise on the way forward?”
[11]
On 13 December 2023 at 8h57, a bill of
costs relating to the wasted costs was sent to Mr Sinwamali under
cover of an e-mail in which
it was recorded that he had informed the
applicant’s attorney at a meeting, and in correspondence, that
the respondent did
not want to proceed with the purchase of the
property. Disappointingly, there was no response to the request
in the e-mails
of 13 November 2023 and 1 December 2023 for advice “on
the way forward”. The e-mail concluded with the following
statement:
“
We
await to receive your payment proposals as to the settlement of the
legal fees herein.”
[12]
At
least by 19 February 2024, the respondent knew that the applicant was
persisting with the application. He was informed
on that day
that the applicant’s attorney was awaiting a date for the
hearing of the application on the opposed roll.
Mr Sinwamali’s
response was an offer of R20 000.00 in settlement of costs.
[4]
It
is not clear whether this was in settlement of the wasted costs or
whether it included the costs of the application.
[13]
On
15 March 2024, Mr Sinwamali was notified that the offer was rejected
but the applicant was amenable to accepting payment of R95 000.00
in full and final settlement of legal costs.
[5]
[14]
There
is a
lacuna
in the e-mail correspondence provided to me. It seems that
after 15 March 2024 Mr Sinwamali offered to pay R30 000.00
for
legal fees. I infer this from an e-mail sent to him on 18 May
2024 informing him that the offer of R30 000.00
[6]
“
in
respect of legal fees” was not acceptable. He was also
informed that the applicant will proceed “with cancelling
the
Sale in Execution on the hearing date and obtaining a cost order on
the attorney-client scale.” Therefore, by 18
May 2024, at
the very latest, Mr Sinwamali knew that the applicant insisted on a
tender for the payment of costs failing which
the application would
proceed on the opposed roll on 10 June 2024.
[15]
The
bill of costs for the wasted costs was settled at R30 000.00 at
the taxation on 24 May 2024
[7]
.
Later that day, Mr Sinwamali sent an e-mail expressing surprise that
the application would proceed on the opposed roll.
According to
him, he had communicated as far back as 9 November 2023 that the
respondent would not oppose the application and that
it would not pay
any legal costs after 9 November 2023. I have found nothing in
any of the e-mails before me that the respondent
will not pay for
costs incurred after 9 November 2023. Regardless, the
respondent was not absolved from paying the costs
of the application
because the applicant had to institute legal proceedings and incurred
further costs consequent upon the respondent’s
opposition to
the application.
[16]
On 30 May 2024 at 9h53 Mr Sinwamali sent by
e-mail a “Notice of Withdrawal of Defence” embodying a
tender for the payment
of “the wasted costs occasioned by the
applicant either taxed or agreed”. The applicant’s
attorney responded
to the e-mail at 9h59. She informed Mr
Sinwamali that the applicant “does not consent to the
withdrawal on the basis
that [the respondent] only tender [
sic
]
the wasted costs.” The e-mail ended with a demand that “legal
fees must be tendered on the attorney and client scale
for the
opposed proceedings”.
[17]
For more than six months (between 9
November 2023 and 30 May 2024) the respondent refused to tender any
costs relating to the application,
notwithstanding the consent to the
cancellation of the sale on 9 November 2023.
[18]
I do not agree that the respondent’s
liability for costs should be limited until 9 November 2023. No
tender for the
payment of costs was made before 30 May 2024, not even
costs up to 9 November 2023. A tender was made for the first
time
in the Notice of Withdrawal e-mailed to the applicant’s
attorney on 30 May 2024, but it is not by any means clear what would
constitute wasted costs when litigation has come to an end. The
Notice of Withdrawal embodying a tender for costs was however
an
acknowledgment that the respondent is liable for costs. Absent
a tender for the payment of the costs of the application,
the
applicant could not recover the costs unless such an order was made.
The applicant, was hence entitled to insist on the
respondent
tendering the costs of the application, failing which to obtain an
order to that effect.
[19]
While it is so that the applicant could
have pursued the relief for the cancellation of the sale in an
unopposed motion court it
could not persist with an order for costs
if the respondent decided to oppose the order for costs. There
is a strong likelihood
that Mr Sinwamali would have opposed a costs
order when the application served in the unopposed motion court.
The applicant
could not anticipate whether the respondent would
oppose the application for costs, or not. As it turns out the
respondent
did oppose the application for costs.
[20]
The applicant is entitled to all costs up
to and including the costs for the hearing in the opposed motion
court on 10 June 2024.
[21]
That
leaves the question whether the respondent should be mulcted with
costs on the attorney-client scale. The respondent
did not
honour its obligations under the Conditions of Sale. Mr
Sinwamali, the sole member of the respondent appears to have
been
dilatory, but no case is made out for
mala
fides
.
Additionally I am not satisfied that special considerations
[8]
exist
to warrant a punitive costs order. The respondent had a right
to demand that the dispute is settled by a court.
[22]
The failure to tender the costs of the
application on the face of it was unreasonable. There was no
tender for any costs until
30 May 2023 and then too it is not clear
what costs were tendered. I cannot ignore that Mr Sinwamali was
not represented
by a legal practitioner. He did not have the
benefit of advice on the rules of the game. He may not have
appreciated
that a respondent who withdraws its opposition to
litigation is generally liable to pay the costs of the litigation.
[23]
In the circumstances I cannot find that the
respondent’s conduct warrants the censure of a punitive costs
order.
[24]
There is a further reason why I am not
inclined to award punitive costs against the respondent. Had
the applicant’s
attorney responded to Mr Sinwamali’s
request in his e-mails of 13 November 2023 and 1 December 2023 for
advice on the way
forward the dispute as to costs may have been
resolved months ago. The notice of withdrawal embodying the
tender for wasted
costs demonstrates that Mr Sinwamali did not
understand the difference between wasted costs and costs of the
application.
I explained the difference to him before he
commenced addressing me and his response confirmed that he did not
understand the difference.
Where a litigant is unrepresented
especially in a case such as this one there is a moral
responsibility, if nothing more, on the
other party’s legal
representative to guide the unrepresented litigant who requests
guidance on simple procedural matters
which do not prejudice his/her
client’s case on the merits. If an attorney is not
comfortable guiding the unrepresented
litigant that should be
communicated to the litigant. No reasons have to be given.
In the circumstances of this case,
it would not have prejudiced the
applicant if the applicant’s attorney explained to Mr Sinwamali
that he should deliver a
notice of withdrawal of opposition and that
the notice had to embody a tender for costs, and why.
Additionally, what the
consequence of the failure to tender costs
would be for the respondent. This would have allowed Mr
Sinwamali to make an informed
decision. It is not just in the
circumstances of this case to mulct the respondent with punitive
costs.
[25]
The applicant has made out a case for the
cancellation of the sale in execution under rule 46(11) of the
Uniform Rules of Court.
[26]
The applicant was authorised on 12 May 2020
to sell the immovable property. I am not asked to reconsider
that decision.
The sale was authorised without a reserve
price. The applicant seeks authority for the property to be
sold subject to a reserve
price. Even though rule 46(11) does
not provide for this, I am not precluded from setting a reserve
price. The application
has been served on interested parties.
There is no prejudice to the judgment debtor, and the judgment
creditor is aware of
the application.
[27]
An amount of R3 329 189.32 (three
million three hundred and twenty-nine thousand, one hundred and
eighty-nine rand and thirty-two
cents) is owed to the judgment
creditor. The highest bid at the sale in execution on 19 May
2022 was R905 000.00.
[28]
The
approximate market value of the property is R1 600 000.00 (one
million six hundred thousand rand). The municipal
value
of the property as per the municipal statement dated 5 June 2024 is
R1 512 000.00 (one million five hundred and
twelve thousand
rand). It has decreased by approximately R188 000.00
[9]
in
the last 22 (twenty-two) months. The forced sale value is
estimated at R1 280 000.00.
[29]
An
amount of R103 172.26 (one hundred and three thousand one hundred and
seventy-two rands and twenty-six cents) is owed to the
municipality.
This is a R32 807.82
[10]
increase
in the last 22 (twenty-two) months. An amount of R571 758.73
(five hundred and seventy-one thousand seven hundred
and fifty-eight
rands and seventy-three cents) is owed to the body corporate for
levies. This is a R274 844.09 increase
in 22 (twenty-two)
months.
[11]
[30]
Considering the amounts due to the
municipality and the body corporate, and taking into account that the
highest bid at the sale
in execution was R905 000.00 a reserve
price set at R700 000.00 will protect the interests of the
judgment creditor and
the judgment debtor in this case.
[31]
Consequently, I make the following order:
(a)
The sale in execution held on 19 May 2022, in respect of the
immovable property described
hereunder is cancelled and the Applicant
is authorized to sell the property at a sale in execution as per the
terms of the order
granted on 12 May 2020 and subject to the reserve
price in paragraph 2 below –
Section 211 as shown and
more fully described on Sectional Plan No. SS89/2017 in the scheme
known as MALAKITE, in respect of the
land and building or buildings
situated at Greenstone Hill Extension 2[...] Township, City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality
of which section the floor
area, according to the said Sectional Plan is 108 (one hundred and
eight) square metres in extent; and
an undivided share in the
common property in the scheme apportioned to the said section in
accordance with the participation quota
as endorsed on the said
sectional plan.
held under Deed of
Transfer S[...] and subject to such conditions as set out in the
aforesaid Deed.
(b)
The property described in (a) above shall be sold subject to a
reserve price of R700 000.00.
(c)
The deposit paid by the respondent,
Glen Life
Properties CC,
shall be retained by the applicant and held in
trust, pending the quantification of the loss suffered, if any, and a
judgment therefor
in terms of Rule 46(11), provided that if no claim
for loss is lodged within 120 days of the date of this order, the
deposit shall
be refunded to the respondent,
Glen
Life Properties CC
.
(d)
The respondent,
Glen Life Properties CC,
is
to pay the costs of this application on a party and party scale on
scale B.
(e)
Tshepiso Pertunia Phadu N.O’s
(“the judgment debtor”) attention is drawn to
ss129(3)
and (4) of the
National Credit Act No. 34 of 2005
which provides that
she may prior to the sale of the immovable property in execution, pay
to the plaintiff,
Firstrand Bank Limited
all overdue/arrear amounts together with the plaintiff’s
permitted default charges and taxed or agreed costs of enforcing
the
agreement, and thereby revive the credit agreement.
(f)
The judgment debtor may obtain the
arrear
amounts and enforcement costs together with the default charges from
the plaintiff or its attorney of record. The judgment debtor
is
advised that the arrear amount (together with default charges and
enforcement costs) is not the full amount outstanding to the
plaintiff but constitutes only the arrears owed by the judgment
debtor to the plaintiff and does not constitute the accelerated
amount.
S
K HASSIM
Judge:
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Applicant’s
Counsel:
Adv H
Marais
Hearing:
10
June 2024
Order:
20
June 2024
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the
parties’ 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 20 June 2024.
[1]
On
or about 10 February 2023.
[2]
9 November 2023 sent to the
applicant’s attorney at 18h20. 13 November 2023
sent to
the applicant’s attorney on at 9h11. 1 December 2023
sent to the applicant’s attorney at 10h44.
19 February
2024 sent to the applicant’s attorney at 15h50. 30 May
2024 sent to the applicant’s attorney at
09h53. 30 May
2024 sent by the applicant’s attorney at 09h59.
[3]
The respondent had
unsuccessfully attempted to challenge before the Community Schemes
Ombud Service the outstanding levies due to the body corporate
[4]
CL
V11.
[5]
CL
V10. Considering that the bill of costs (to be taxed for the
wasted costs) was for R48 359.19, the amount of R95 000.00
in my view must have included the costs of the application.
[6]
The
e-mail does not state whether the amount of R30 000.00 was
tendered for the costs of the application or in settlement
of the
costs order made on 17 November 2022.
[7]
CL9-7
to CL9-12.
[8]
Nel
v Waterberg Landbouwers Ko-operatieve Vereeniging
1946
AD 597
[9]
At 4 August 2022 the municipal
value was R1 700 000.00.
[10]
On 4 August 2022 the outstanding
rates and taxes were R70,364.18
[11]
On 10 August 2022 the outstanding
levies were R296 914.64
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