Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 607South Africa
Leloko Homeowners Association v Letele and Others (030838/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 607 (2 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
2 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Leloko Homeowners Association v Letele and Others (030838/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 607 (2 August 2023)
Leloko Homeowners Association v Letele and Others (030838/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 607 (2 August 2023)
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sino date 2 August 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
[GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA]
CASE
NO: 030838/22
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/ NO
3.
REVISED.
DATE:
02/08/2023
In
the matter between:-
LELOKO
HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION
Applicant
and
KHOPOLO
PETER LETELE
First
Respondent
RELEBOHILE
ELIZABETH LETELE
Second
Respondent
KAMOGELO
MAPUTLA
(Adjudicator)
Third
Respondent
COMMUNITY
SCHEMES OMBUD SERVICE
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SKOSANA
AJ
[1]
What the applicant seeks in this application is in essence a review
coupled with an application to dismiss
a certain complaint and
application for dispute resolution lodged with the fourth respondent.
The latter part of the relief constitutes
a substitution of the
decision under review. The rest of the prayers in the notice of
motion are either superfluous or have been
overtaken by events.
[2]
The review concerns a decision taken by the third respondent
(“adjudicator”) on 17 July 2022 in
which the adjudicator
found in favour of the first respondent that the applicant must
recalculate the second respondent’s
levies with the exclusion
of the construction liability, the legal fees and interest. He also
directed the applicant to allow contractors
to perform work at the
property in question. The adjudicator adjudicated under the auspices
of the Community Schemes Ombud Service
(“CSOS/fourth
respondent”) and on the basis of the CSOS Act 9 of 2011.
BACKGROUND
[3]
The applicant is a Homeowners Association and a non-profit company
whose purpose is, among others, to promote,
advance and protect the
communal interests, safety and welfare of its members by applying and
enforcing rules which have been accepted
by such members. It also
collects levies from members in accordance with such rules.
[4]
The first respondent (“Mr Khopolo Letele”) is the father
to the second respondent (“Ms Relebohile
Letele”). Ms
Relebohile Letele is the registered and sole owner of Erf 8[....],
Kosmos Ext.7 Township, Registration Division
JQ North West province
(“the property”), which is part of the properties falling
within the control of the applicant
and its rules. She therefore is a
member of the applicant in terms of the applicant’s memorandum
of incorporation.
[5]
Ms Relebohile Letele defaulted in the payment of levies to the
applicant leading to the applicant seeking
and obtaining judgment
against her in the Magistrates’ court on 24 February 2021 for
R67 624-77 plus punitive costs
which were taxed in the amount of
R26 526-91(“the judgment”).
[6]
Later, an application for sequestration of Ms Relebohile Letele was
instituted by the applicant and culminated
in her final sequestration
on 22 May 2023 by order of Makhoba J. In the meantime, Mr Khopolo
Letele lodged a complaint and an application
for dispute resolution
with the fourth respondent which culminated in the adjudication order
by the third respondent on 17 July
2022. It is that adjudication
order which is the subject of the present review application.
GROUNDS
OF REVIEW AND FINDINGS
[7]
I do not intend to deal with each and every ground of review in
detail as almost each one of them is adequate
to justify the review
and setting aside of the adjudication order.
[8]
But before dealing with such grounds, it is important to clarify the
following jurisdictional matters:
[8.1] Although
the applicant relied on the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3
of 2000 (“PAJA”), to review the
adjudication order, it
was equally entitled to appeal against it in this court by virtue of
section 57 of the CSOS Act, though
such appeal would have been
limited to questions of law.
[8.2] I mention
this because about all the grounds of review relate to questions of
law. In any event, the applicant has satisfactorily
shown that it is
entitled to rely on the PAJA for the present review. The difference
is rather academic than practical, any way.
[9]
The first and perhaps the main ground of review relates to the
locus
standi
of Mr Khopolo Letele primarily at adjudication. He signed
the dispute resolution form without any proven authorization by his
daughter.
It is common cause that the relationship between Ms
Relebohile Letele and the applicant is contractual and makes her a
member of
the applicant. It follows that Mr Khopolo Letele had no
locus standi
in the adjudication proceedings and I doubt if he
has it in the present proceedings.
[10]
It is also clear that the dispute related to the payment of levies in
relation to the particular property of Ms Relebohile
Letele. The
liability to pay levies is attached only to and could only be
enforced against her. No legally valid ground was proffered
by Mr
Khopolo Letele in this regard. He appeared in person.
[11]
The ground was duly raised before the adjudicator (third respondent)
who appears to have taken cognizance of it but failed
to make a
ruling thereon. Instead, in the ruling, the adjudicator simply
assumes that the application has been brought by Ms Relebohile
Letele
and orders that she has been successful against the applicant.
[12]
I am of the view that this ground alone renders the adjudication
order unlawful, unreasonable and procedurally unfair.
[13]
The other equally insurmountable ground is that the adjudication took
place notwithstanding the existence of the Magistrates’
court
judgment contrary to the jurisdictional requirements for such
adjudication. This was confirmed by an email from the CSOS
itself
dated 27 June 2022 that relief cannot be sought in respect of a
matter for which judgment has been granted. This in turn
is taken
from clause 21.5.7 of the Practice Directive on Dispute Resolution.
The Directives are passed under section 36 of the
CSOS Act.
[14]
It is also a matter of logic and jurisprudence that such a statutory
adjudicative tribunal must submit to the power of
a court of law. The
adjudication order indirectly reverses and contradicts the
Magistrates court order. That is legally impermissible.
This ground
therefore also justifies the setting aside of the adjudication order.
[15]
Another fatal defect is the issue of the adjudication order before
all the submissions had been filed with the adjudicator.
The
adjudication order is dated 17 July 2022 while the applicant’s
submissions were given to the adjudicator on 18 July 2022,
as
requested by the adjudicator. This is exacerbated by the fact that
the adjudication was decided on the basis of written submissions
of
the parties, without hearing oral submissions.
[16]
Accordingly, this ground also warrants the review and setting aside
of the adjudication order.
[17]
As stated earlier, Ms Relebohile Letele has been sequestrated. Her
estate, including the property is now under the control
of a curator.
That means Ms Relebohile Letele no longer has ownership nor has Mr
Khopolo Letele ever had it.
[18]
It is my view that not only is the adjudication order unlawful and
unreasonable but also there are exceptional circumstances
which
justify the substitution thereof, in that:
[18.1]
All the facts associated with the grounds of review above are already
before me. Those fatcs have not been nor can
they be disputed. In
effect, only the law had to be decided in relation to the three
points referred to above, being
locus standi
, the effect of
the existing judgment and adjudication before receipt of the
applicants’ submissions.
[18.2]
Further, the sequestration of Ms Relebohile Letele has made it
impractical to remit the matter for adjudication again
as she is no
longer in control of her estate. The curator of her estate, whom I
have been assured he is aware of the present proceedings,
has decided
not to oppose this application taking into account that the final
sequestration order was granted a few months ago.
[19]
In the light of the above, it is my view that the adjudication award
is reviewable on the basis of lawfulness, reasonableness
and
procedural fairness. Further, the adjudication order must be
substituted with an order that the application for adjudication
dispute by Ms Khopolo Letele is dismissed on the basis of section
8(1)(c)(ii)(aa) of the PAJA.
[20]
As to costs, the application was not opposed by the adjudicator, the
CSOS and Ms Relebohile Letele. Only Mr Khopolo Letele
opposed it.
However, his opposition and in person appearance was limited to the
issue of the recalculation of the levies as well
as the non-inclusion
of construction liability fee. I have made no direct findings in that
regard nor do I find it necessary to
do so. He made no meaningful
submissions in relation to the legal issues at hand.
[21]
Mr Khopolo Letele was clearly misled and given false hope by the
adjudication order, understandably as a lay person.
His actions are
at least to some remarkable degree motivated by the fatherly instinct
to protect his offspring. In all the circumstances
of the case, I am
not inclined to grant costs against him.
[22]
In the result, I make the following order:
[22.1] The third
respondent’s adjudication order dated 17 July 2022 is hereby
reviewed and set aside.
[22.2] The order
by the third respondent is substituted with an order that the
application for dispute resolution is dismissed.
[22.3] There is
no order as to costs.
DT
SKOSANA
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Pretoria
Date
of hearing:
26 July 2023
Date
of Judgment:
02 August 2023
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant: Advocate
Roos
Instructing
Attorneys: Linda
Erasmus Attorneys
For
the Respondent: Mr
Letele (In person)
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