Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1825South Africa
Shakoane v Community Schemes Ombud Service and Others (A23/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1825 (20 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 October 2023
Headnotes
the appellant liable for an alleged arrear levy amounting to R13 868. 66;
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Shakoane v Community Schemes Ombud Service and Others (A23/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1825 (20 October 2023)
Shakoane v Community Schemes Ombud Service and Others (A23/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1825 (20 October 2023)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: A23/2023
DOH: 22 August 2023
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
/YES
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
/YES
3.
REVISED.
DATE: 20 October
2023
SIGNATURE
In the matter of:
GIFT
SHAKOANE
Appellant
AND
COMMUNITY
SCHEMES OMBUD SERVICE
First Respondent
FEZILE
SITHOLE
Second Respondent
FORESTDALE
HOMEOWNERS’ ASSOCIATION
Third
Respondent
JUDGEMENT
THIS JUDGMENT HAS BEEN
HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES BY
E-MAIL. THE DATE AND TIME OF HAND DOWN IS
DEEMED TO BE 20 OCTOBER
2023
Bam
J (Pretorius J concurring)
Introduction
1.
This
is an appeal in terms of
section 57
of the
Community Schemes Ombud
Service Act
>
[1]
(the Act) against the decision of the second respondent of 17 March
2022. Alongside the appeal is an application for condonation
owing to
the late lodging of the appeal.
The Parties
2.
The appellant is the owner of unit 4[...]
Forestdale Complex, Douglasdale.
3.
The first respondent is the Community
Schemes Ombud Service. The Service is established in terms of the
Act.
4.
The second respondent is the adjudicator.
5.
The third respondent is Forestdale Home
Owners’ Association.
Grounds of Appeal
6.
In the main, the appellant contends in his
Notice of Appeal that the second respondent,
inter
alia
:
6.1 failed to observe the
audi alteram partem
rule in that he failed to give the
appellant notice of the application by the third respondent;
6.2 failed to afford him
the opportunity to make written submissions;
6.2 failed to investigate
the complaint prior to making his decision. As a result of the second
respondent’s failure to investigate,
he incorrectly held the
appellant liable for an alleged arrear levy amounting to R13 868. 66;
6.3 failed to deliver his
order to the appellant as prescribed by
section 55
of the Act.
7.
The appellant seeks the following orders:
7.1 That the late lodging
of the appeal be condoned.
7.2 That the appeal be
upheld.
7.3 The second
respondent’s order of 17 March be set aside.
7.4 Declaring that the
judgment of 15 March, issued by the Magistrate’s Court for the
District of Randburg and mentioned in
the Writ of Execution, does not
exist.
7.5 That the Writ of
Execution of 25 August 2022 be set aside.
7.6 That the Notice of
Attachment of the Sheriff of Randburg West be set aside; and
7.7 Costs on attorney and
client scale.
8.
The appeal and the application for
condonation are opposed only by the third respondent. The third
respondent is for ease of reference
referred to as the respondent
throughout this judgment. The respondent raised a point
in
limine
regarding the deponent’s
knowledge of the facts and an incorrect confirmatory affidavit. It
further asserted that the appellant
had failed to make a case for
condonation. The respondent further argues that:
8.1 The appellant was
notified of the application
via
e-mail and invited to make
written submissions prior to the adjudication.
8. 2
Section 43
of the
Act does not preclude service by e-mail.
8.3 All communication was
sent to the same e-mail address that the appellant had used and
continues to use. He has not explained
to the court why he had not
received the communication.
8.4 The prescribed
management rules do not apply to home owners’ associations but
only to Bodies Corporate.
9.
Finally, on the issue of incorrectly
holding the appellant liable, the respondent submits that the
appellant is liable for damage
caused by his guest. Third respondent
submits that the appeal together with the condonation should be
dismissed with costs.
Background
10.
The dispute between the parties appears to
have emanated from a levy statement issued by the respondent through
its then managing
agent during or about 24 March 2021, depicting that
appellant was in arrears with his levy in the amount of R7683.00. The
statement
suggested that an amount had been debited based on an
invoice for an item or services supplied by Paul’s Gate.
Interest at
the rate of 9% per annum was further added to the
statement. On the same day, the appellant replied to the agents
asking
pertinently about the item marked Paul’s Gate. The
response sent by Mr Jacque Mare of 26 March attached a letter of 21
February
2021 relaying that the appellant’s water meter had not
been operational between the months of January up to 14 September
2020. The water use had accordingly been estimated in the amount of R
5 036.00 but the total amount due by appellant was R 5 462.00.
11.
The appellant replied once again seeking an
explanation regarding the item labelled Paul’s gate in the
statement. The agents
wrote back attaching a levy statement, not an
invoice, depicting the amounts of R 5 462.00 for water and R 5 036.00
in respect
of Paul’s gate. The next levy statement was in April
2021 and depicted that the appellant owed an amount of R13 058.33. A
flurry of e-mail correspondence was exchanged by the parties
thereafter. In short, there was a clear dispute regarding the two
amounts, not the levy itself.
Point
in limine
12.
The respondent submits that the deponent to
the affidavit supporting the condonation application is an attorney.
He does not explain
how he had gained personal knowledge of the
material facts on which the appellant bases his case. The respondent
further submits
that the appellant filed a supporting affidavit which
bears no relation to the case. The appellant is represented by an
attorney
in these proceedings, one Mr Ngomame, whom, judging from the
record, has been communicating for some with the respondent,
via
its agents. Given the written trail and the accessibility of the
details to this case, the criticism that Mr Ngomane does not state
where he gained his personal knowledge amounts to unnecessary
formalism.
13.
As
was said by Corbett JA in the Appellate Division case of
Maharaj
v
Barclays
Bank Ltd
[2]
,
unnecessary
formalism on procedural matters must be eschewed
.
As to the incorrect affidavit attached by appellant, the court
accepts his explanation that this was in error. The error
has
since been corrected by uploading the correct affidavit.
Condonation
14.
It is trite that this court has the power
to regulate its own procedures and that such power includes not only
non-compliance with
the Uniform Rules, it includes statutory time
limits. See in this regard
Samancor
Group Pension Fund
v
Samancor
Chrome
:
‘
The
high court, because of its inherent jurisdiction, has powers to
govern its own procedures. The said jurisdiction pertains not
only to
non-compliance with the Rules of Court but also to statutory time
limits…’
[3]
15.
In
Toyota
South Africa Motors (Pty) Ltd
v
Commissioner for the South African
Revenue Service
, the court reasoned:
‘
[9]
The first question for decision is whether it was, as contended in
the respondent's heads of argument, not open to the Court
below to
grant condonation.… We are dealing here with non-compliance
with a statutory provision laying down the time within
which an
appeal from the decision of the Special Court must be noted. It is of
no practical assistance to seek to classify the
provision as
peremptory or directory. The enquiry is simply: what did the
legislature intend? Weenen Transitional Local Council
v SJ Van Dyk,
Supreme Court of Appeal Case 399/2000 in which judgment was delivered
on 14 March 2002, at pp 10-11). That the legislature
did not intend
non-compliance within the 21 business days referred to in s 86A(12)
inevitably to have fatal consequences for an
intended appeal is, in
my view, clearly apparent….’
[10]
These conclusions based on interpretation are strengthened, of
course, by the separate consideration that the High Court has
inherent jurisdiction to govern its own procedures and, more
particularly, the matter of access to it by litigants who seek no
more than to exercise their rights. It has been held that this
jurisdiction pertains not only to condonation of non-compliance
with
the time limit set by a rule but also a statutory time limit:
Phillips v Direkteur van Statistiek
1959 (3) SA 370
(A) at 374 G …’
[4]
16.
The decision whether to grant or
refuse condonation is determined by the interests of justice. This
much is plain from
Aurecon South Africa
(Pty) Ltd
v
City
of Cape Town
:
‘
[16]
Contrary to the court a quo’s finding in this regard, the City
far exceeded the time frames stipulated in s 7(1) [of
PAJA] and did
not launch the review proceedings within a reasonable time. In that
case, it clearly needed an extension as envisaged
in s 9(1)(b)
without which the court a quo was otherwise precluded from
entertaining the review application…
[17]
The question then is whether the City made out a case for such an
extension. Whether it is in the interests of justice to condone
a
delay depends entirely on the facts and circumstances of each case…’
[5]
17.
We do not to wish the belabour the
test for condonation. However, it is important to refer to the
ratio
on the issue of condonation as set out in
Steenkamp
v
Edcon Limited
,
where the Constitutional Court, held:
‘
[26]
The principle is firmly established in our law that where time limits
are set, whether statutory or in terms of the rules of
court, a court
has an inherent discretion to grant condonation where the interests
of justice demand it and where the reasons for
non-compliance with
the time limits have been explained to the satisfaction of the court.
In Grootboom this Court held that—
“
[i]t
is axiomatic that condoning a party's non-compliance with the rules
of court or directions is an indulgence. The court seized
with the
matter has a discretion whether to grant condonation.”
[27] And that—
“
It
is by now axiomatic that the granting or refusal of condonation is a
matter of judicial discretion. It involves a value judgment
by the
court seized with a matter based on the facts of that particular
case.”
[36] Granting
condonation must be in the interests of justice. This Court in
Grootboom set out the factors that must be considered
in determining
whether or not it is in the interests of justice to grant
condonation:
“
[T]he
standard for considering an application for condonation is the
interests of justice. However, the concept ‘interests
of
justice’ is so elastic that it is not capable of precise
definition…’
[6]
18.
The respondent’s submissions centred
on
Ncala
v
Park Avenue Body Corporate
,
a decision of the Full Bench of this
court. According to the respondent,
Ncala
is authority for the fact that this court, sitting as a court of
appeal, has no jurisdiction to condone non-compliance with Section
57
(2) of the Act. Section 57 deals with the right of appeal and it
states:
‘
Right
of appeal
57. (1) An applicant,
the association or any affected person who is dissatisfied by an
adjudicator’s order, may appeal to
the High Court, but only on
a question of law.
(2)
An appeal against an order must be lodged within 30 days after the
date of delivery 25 of the order of the adjudicator. (3)…
’
19.
In
Ncala,
the appellant lodged his appeal 65 days late, in 2019, without an
application for condonation. One year later in 2020, he filed
his
application for condonation. In considering the application for
condonation, the learned judge Ossin AJ, after surveying the
relevant
case law, turned to the circumstances of the case stating that even
if his analysis of the applicable legal principles
may have been with
too strict
[7]
,
the application in any event fell to be rejected based on
Ncala’s
failure to state the reasons he waited for one year prior to
launching his appeal.
Ncala
must
accordingly be distinguished from the present case.
20.
I
propose to first dispose of what may be regarded as a dispute of fact
when in fact it is not. Section 55 of the Act enjoins the
Ombud to
cause a copy of his order to be delivered on every affected person.
The respondent submitted, with reference to an e-mail
that was sent
by the second respondent, that the appellant had been notified or
served with the Ombud’s order. This statement
must be viewed
against the undisputed fact that there had been no prior arrangement
between the parties nor between the Ombud’s
office and the
appellant to exchange notices
via
email.
The respondent does not even know whether the e-mail bounced back
after it had been sent. Accordingly, the statement does
not amount to
a dispute of fact and does not invoke the application of the
Plascon
Evans
Rule
[8]
.
21.
The respondent further submitted that
Section 43 does not preclude delivery by e-mail. Delivery by email is
not proof that the intended
recipient has received the email, more so
where there had been no prior arrangement to exchange notices or
correspondence by email.
There was no evidence that the appellant had
either read or received the email. During argument Counsel conceded
that for a variety
of reasons intended recipients may at times not
receive their e-mail/s. Accordingly it is idle to call upon the
intended recipient
to defend why he had not receive a particular
e-mail or e-mails. [See in this regard
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service
v
Morgan Beef
(Pty) Ltd (66096/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 367 (2 May 2022), paragraph
17.] Where a sender chooses to rely on e-mail for service, as
the
second respondent does, they must track the email for display and or
delivery to the intended recipient, or they must use the
traditional
methods of service.
22.
Having conceded that there was no credible
evidence pointing to the service of the order upon the appellant,
Counsel submitted that
the appellant did not provide reasons for his
delay in launching the urgent application after service of the writ
on 12 October
2022. The appellant explained in his affidavit that
they had to first investigate the matter. In this regard, his
attorney had
written to the respondent’s attorneys requesting
assistance with various pieces of information. It is also not in
dispute
that his attorney had sought an undertaking from the
respondents that they not continue with execution whilst he was
investigating
the matter and requested them to revert by no later
than 21 October. Such an undertaking was not provided. The appellant
had to
launch an urgent application to prevent the respondents from
continuing with the execution. The order was obtained on 18 November
2022.
23.
Counsel for the respondent criticised the
appellant’s attorney for his reference in his affidavit to the
lack of availability
of typing services at that time of the year. The
fundamental problem with the submission is that it overlooks that the
appellant,
having not received notification of the respondent’s
application, was served with a writ. He had to investigate the matter
and instructed his attorneys to do so. After the urgent order
was granted, the earliest the application could be filed, taking
into
account the time of the year that this incident occured, was in
January 2023. The explanation is reasonable to the court,
taking into
account the circumstances of this case. We find that the
circumstances surrounding the delay in filing the appeal have
been
adequately explained and condonation should be granted.
Prospects of success
24.
Section 43 of the Act provides that the
Ombud must serve notice on:
(a)
the association; and
(b)
each person the Ombud considers to be
affected materially by the application.
25.
Such notice must include,
inter alia
, details of the parties
to the dispute and the relief sought in terms of the application. It
must also invite written submissions,
and draw attention to the right
to legal representation. The record suggests that on 16 January and
on 24 February 2022, the second
respondent had issued an e-mail
inviting the appellant to submit his final written submissions. The
submissions were required within
5 days from the date of invitation.
There is no evidence of either a delivery or display receipt. For the
same reasons as cited
when dealing with the requirement on the Ombud
to deliver the order, this court accepts that there is no proof that
the appellant
was notified of the complaint.
25.
Section 43 (1) is couched in peremptory
terms and it reads:
‘
43.
(1) Unless an application is rejected, the ombud must serve notice
on—
(a)
the association; and (b) each person the ombud
considers to be affected materially by the application…
’
27.
The court in
Toyota South Africa Motors
said that it is of no
use classifying a provision as directory or peremptory, the question
is what did the lawgiver intend. In
CSARS
v
Marshall NO and
Others
, the legal principles of interpretation were once again
articulated thus:
‘…
The
principles applicable in the process of ascertaining the meaning of
legislative provisions have been repeatedly stated by this
court. It
is settled law that the process entails attributing meaning to the
relevant statutory provision, in the light of the
language used, the
context in which the provision is set, including the material known
to the drafters, and the purpose which the
provision is intended to
serve. These factors are not mutually exclusive. See Natal Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality…’
28.
From the plain language used in the Act, the Ombud is enjoined to
serve a notice to each
person the Ombud considers to be affected
materially by the application. The context in which the statute
must be understood
is not obscure. The Ombud Service is not only as a
service that offers speedy, economic and effective dispute
resolution, but a
service for everyone, including those who do not
have the power to engage the services of a lawyer to take charge of
the procedural
aspects that impact fairness. It is for that reason
that the duty is placed on the Ombud to serve a notice to each person
the Ombud
considers to be affected materially by the application,
otherwise a miscarriage of justice may arise. In
Van
Heerden
[9]
,
it was said:
‘…
This
court has repeatedly held that the failure to give notice of
proceedings where such notice was required constitutes an
irregularity
which justifies rescission of the order granted.
’
29.
It is understandable that the Ombud uses e-mail to maintain a cost
effective service. At
the very least, emails must be tracked either
for a delivery or a read receipt. There is no evidence that the
emails advising the
appellant of the application and inviting him to
file written submissions were received by the appellant, which
renders the second
respondent’s decision liable to be set
aside.
30.
The appellant further submits that the second respondent failed to
investigate the case.
Had he investigated the matter he would have
seen that the so called arrear levy was not a levy but a disputed
debt arising from
amounts such as the damage to the gate and the
disputed water bill. It does not help the respondent to suggest
that appellant
is liable for the conduct of his visitor. The case put
before the second respondent had to do with arrear levies arising
from non
payment. The adjudicator’s order in this regard refers
to levies being the lifeblood of a Home Owners’ Association and
to rule 25 of the Conduct Rules of the respondent dealing with the
owner’s obligation to pay levies.
31.
If the third respondent was confident of appellant’s liability
in respect of the two
disputed issues, it should have placed that
case before the second respondent for adjudication. That would have
enabled the second
respondent to adjudicate the real dispute. A
survey of the correspondence exchanged between the parties prior to
the respondent
lodging its application with the first respondent
shows that these were hotly contested issued that were never brought
to the attention
of the second respondent.
32.
The respondent had a duty, given the absence of the appellant, to
inform the second respondent
of the facts of the dispute so that the
latter adjudicates the real dispute. The third respondent did not do
so. This is a further
reason for the second respondent’s
decision to be set aside. Based on all the reasons set out in this
judgment as well as
applying the legal principles as set out in the
authorities, condonation is granted and the second respondent’s
order must
be set aside.
Order
33.
The following order is issued:
1.
Condonation is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld.
3.
The second respondent’s order of 17
March is set aside.
4.
The judgment of 15 March issued by the
Magistrate’s Court for the District of Randburg, mentioned in
the Writ of Execution
does not exist.
5.
The Writ of Execution of 25 August 2022 is
hereby set aside.
6.
The Notice of Attachment of the Sheriff of
Randburg, West is hereby set aside;
7.
Respondent must pay appellant’s
costs.
NN BAM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
I agree:
PRETORIUS J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing:
22 August 2023
Date
of Judgement:
20 October 2023
Appearances:
For
Appellant:
Adv
MC Ntshangase
Instructed
by
S
Ngomane Attorneys, Pretoria
For
Respondents:
Adv
K Lavine
Instructed
by:
Alan
Levy Attorneys, Parktown.
[1]
Act
9 of 2011
[2]
Maharaj
v National Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A) at 426
[3]
(452/09)
[2010] ZASCA 77
;
2010 (4) SA 540
(SCA);
[2010] 4 All SA 297
(SCA)
(27 May 2010), paragraph 20
[4]
(495/2000)
[2002] ZASCA 27
(28 March 2002), paragraph 9-10
[5]
(20384/2014)
[2015] ZASCA (9 December 2015), paragraph 16-17
[6]
[2019]
ZACC 17
, paragraphs 26-27, 36
[7]
Paragraph
148
[8]
In
Van Heerden v Bronkhorst, it was said:
‘‘
In
certain instances the denial by respondent of a fact alleged by the
applicant may not be such as to raise a real, genuine or
bona fide
dispute of fact . . . If in such a case the respondent has not
availed himself of his right to apply for the deponents
concerned to
be called for cross-examination under Rule 6(5)(g) of the Uniform
Rules of Court . . . the Court . . . may proceed
on the basis of the
correctness thereof . . .’
[See also Signature Real
Estate (Pty) Ltd v Charles Edwards Properties and Others and the
attendant footnote.]
[9]
Note
8
supra
,
paragraph, 13
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