Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 46South Africa
Wingate Body Corporate v Pamba and Another (33185/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 46 (21 January 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Wingate Body Corporate v Pamba and Another (33185/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 46 (21 January 2022)
Wingate Body Corporate v Pamba and Another (33185/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 46 (21 January 2022)
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sino date 21 January 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 33185/2021
In
the matter between:
WINGATE
BODY CORPORATE
Applicant
And
NOBULUNGISA
PAMBA
First Respondent
KANYA
KOPELE
Second respondent
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The Applicant, a body corporate established in terms of the Sectional
Title Schemes
Management Act 8 of 2011, has brought this application
on urgent basis in terms of Rule 6 (12) of the Uniform Rules of the
Court
seeking a final interdictory order against the Respondents, who
are residents in a unit in the complex. The application is opposed
by
the Respondents.
THE
FACTS / DISPUTE
[2]
The dispute between the parties concerns the use of common property
situated next to
the respondents’ residential unit and is used by
them as their carport. The refusal by the respondents to grant access
to plumbers
contracted by the Applicant to replace aged water pipes
running underneath the carport is in the heart of the dispute. The
deponent
to the founding affidavit, Mrs Wendy Kotze, alleges to be
the chairperson of the board of trustees of the Applicant and to have
taken
the decision to institute these proceedings against the
Respondents subsequent to the board taking a resolution mandating her
as
the chairperson to do so.
[3]
Mrs Kotze alleges that the conduct of the respondents is obstructive
to the operations
and to the prevention of recurrent water pipe
bursts causing high water bills. In addition, damage caused by the
water leakages has
resulted in a threatened repudiation of complex’s
insurance claims arising from the leakages. The frequency of the
water leaks
has kept increasing for months and four major leaks had
occurred in month of February 2021 alone.
[4]
In the second instance, Mrs Kotze alleges that the respondents harass
and intimidate
the trustees, including her and her husband, and the
contracted plumbers. She further alleges that the respondents’
shouting and
verbal abuse affects her 29 years old daughter who
suffers from borderline mental retardation and psychosis.
THE
RELIEF SOUGHT
[5]
In consequence of the above, the Applicant seeks the following orders
against the Respondents:
5.1
Prohibiting the Respondents from interfering with the business
operations
and contractual relationship between the Applicant and
Ablaze
Plumbing, the contracted company;
5.2
Prohibiting the respondents from interfering with the Applicant’s
functions
and powers, and the exercise thereof by the trustees, and;
5.3
Prohibiting the Respondents from threatening
or intimidating the
Applicant’s
Board of Trustees or its contractors.
RESPONDENTS’
RULE 7 (1) NOTICE
[6]
The respondents dispute that Mrs Kotze is the chairperson of the
board of trustees and
her authority to institute these proceedings.
In response to the respondents’ rule 7(1) notice, the attorneys for
the Applicant
filed the resolution referred to above which was signed
by the board of trustees on different dates, but failed to file the
requested
minutes of the meeting in which the resolution to appoint
Mrs Kotze as the chairperson was taken. The respondents dispute the
legitimacy
of these proceedings as a result and seek a dismissal
thereof with punitive costs.
POINTS
IN LIMINE RAISED BY THE RESPONDENTS
[7]
The respondents have raised two points in limine to the Applicant’s
claim; a premature
approach to the court and the disputed alleged
position of chairperson and authority of Mrs Kotze to institute these
proceedings.
PREMATURE
APPROACH TO THE COURT
[8]
At paragraph 7 of their Answering Affidavits, the respondents take
the point that the
relief sought by the applicant falls within the
purview and ambit of orders the Community Schemes Ombud Services,
(‘CSOS’) adjudicator
is statutorily empowered to make in disputes
concerning the administration of a sectional title development
scheme. The respondents
contend that the Applicant ought to have
approached the CSOS as the primary forum and that the failure to do
so renders the applicant’s
approach to the court premature and is
fatal to the proceedings.
THE
LAW
[9]
It is common cause that the Applicant is a body corporate established
under the Sectional Title Schemes
Management Act 8 of 2011 (‘the
STSMA’). Section 3(1)(o) of the STSMA makes it mandatory for
a body corporate to be registered
with Community Schemes Ombud
Services, (‘the CSOS’) which was established in terms of section
3 of the CSOS Act 9 of 2011. The
CSOS prescribes the rules,
regulations and procedures for the regulation, management,
administration, use and enjoyment of section
and the common property.
The Applicant is consequently mandatorily subject to the rules,
regulations and procedures prescribed in
the Community Schemes Ombud
Services in terms of sections 10(1) and (2) of the Sectional Title
Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011 (‘STSMA’).
PURPOSE,
FUNCTION AND AUTHORITY OF THE CSOS
[10]
In terms of section 3 of the CSOS Act, the purpose and function of
the office of the Ombud include “
providing for a dispute
resolution mechanism in community schemes and to regulate, monitor
and control the quality of all sectional
titles scheme governance
documentation”.
Section 38(1) regulates applications made in
respect of disputes regarding the administration of a community
scheme. More relevant
for purposes of the present matter are the
provisions of section 39(2)(a) of the STSM Act which empower the CSOS
to grant orders
in respect of behavioural issues including an order
that particular behaviour constitutes a nuisance and require the
relevant person
to act or refrain from acting, in a specified manner.
[11]
Importantly, the CSOS was established, inter alia, for the purpose of
providing expeditious and informal
cost effective mechanism for the
resolution of disputes, including on urgency in terms of Part 7 of
the CSOS Practice Directive on
Dispute Resolution of 2019. (see
Stenersen and Tulleken Administration CC v Linton Park Body
Coprporate & Another (the CSOS joined as amicus curiae
[2019] JOL
46104
(GJ) and Heathrow Property Holdings No 3 CC and Others v
Manhattan Place Body Corporate & Others [2021] ZAWCC 109).
[12]
The question whether a party in the position of the Applicant has the
liberty to choose a forum for the
purpose of obtaining relief has
been addressed in numerous precedent cases. While it is trite that
the High Court has concurrent
jurisdiction to hear a matter properly
brought before it, the Courts have adopted the view that not all
matters brought before them
necessarily ought to be entertained by
the Courts. The Supreme Court of Appeal, whilst asserting the
concurrent jurisdiction of the
High Court, has pronounced on a
preference for the adjudication, by specialised structures, of
matters in respect of which such structures
were created specifically
to resolve disputes of a particular nature effectively and
expeditiously, adding that a court might in
such circumstances be
entitled to decline to exercise its jurisdiction (see
Agri Wire
(Pty) Ltd and Another v Commissioner, Competition Commission and
Others
2013
(5) SA 484 (SCA).
[13]
In the Heathrow matter, the Court set out the position thus:
“
by
establishing the CSOS whose personnel is required to consist of
suitably
qualified adjudicators, the legislature had intended that the
CSOS be the
primary forum for the adjudication and resolution of
disputes in
matters such as the present’’
. The Court
went on to state
that; “
a court
is not only entitled to decline to entertain such matters as a forum
of first instance, but may in fact be obliged to do so,
save in
exceptional
circumstances. Such matters will not be matters which are
properly before
the High Court, and on the strength of the principle in
Standard Credit
(and a number of courts thereafter, including the
Constitutional
Court in Agri Wire), it is accordingly entitled to decline to
hear them, even
if no abuse of process is involved.”
[14]
The learned Judge likened the provisions of the CSOS with those of
PAJA which make it mandatory for a
party to a dispute to initially
seek relief in structures that have been statutorily established to
deal with the particular dispute.
In this regard the Court found that
the application before it ought to have been dealt with in terms of
the dispute resolution procedures
of the CSOS Act and not by the
Court and concluded thus;
“
In the result,
I am of the view that where disputes pertaining to community schemes
such as sectional title schemes fall within the
ambit and purview of
the of the CSOS Act, they are in the first instance to be referred to
the Ombud for resolution…… In this
regard, as far as the High
Court is concerned, the processes which have been provided for the
resolution of disputes in terms of
the CSOS Act are, in my view,
tantamount to ‘internal remedies’ (to borrow a term from the
Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act), which must ordinarily first
be exhausted before the High Court may be approached for relief.”
[15]
An important underlying reason for the preference of adjudication by
specialised structures was expressed
by Sher J as follows:
“
in numerous
instances an adjudicator has an equity i.e., fairness based
power not only to
decide what is reasonable in relation to the conduct of,
or the decisions
which have been taken by an association such as a body
corporate of a sectional title, but
also to direct what should [be]
reasonably done
in place thereof. A High Court does not have such powers. It is
confined to reviewing the legality or rationality
of the conduct
of a
decision-making body and not the fairness thereof, and when doing so
it generally does not have the power to substitute its own
decision
as to what would be fair or reasonable, in place of the body. The
best it can do ordinarily, unless it is clear that no
other decision
can be made on the issue and the relief which is sought must
inevitably follow as a matter of law or logic, is to
set aside the
decision or conduct concerned and refer the matter back to the body
for a decision anew’’.
[
Heathrow
Property Holdings
at [paras 52 – 53].
REQUIREMENTS
FOR A FINAL ORDER
[16]
It is trite that an Applicant seeking an order of a final nature must
show that; (a) it has a clear right;
(b) that the right is under
threat of infringement or that the Applicant has a reasonable
apprehension of irreparable harm being
inflicted to its right and,
(c) that the Applicant has no other alternative, but to approach the
Court for the relief sought. It
is apparent in the present matter
that the Applicant does not meet, at least, the last mentioned
requirement as the CSOS is the primary
forum to adjudicate on all the
issues concerned in this case, including on urgent basis.
PERTINENT
FACTS ON URGENCY
[17]
The Respondents have disputed the Applicant assertion that the matter
is urgent. Importantly and on the
Chairperson’s own account, major
water leakage problems manifested in February 2021 (see para 6.2 and
7.5 of the founding affidavit).
The resolution to take action to
repair the leakages was taken in June 2021. The resolution for the
institution of these proceedings
was signed on the 2
nd
and
4
th
July 2021. These proceedings were instituted on 05
July 2021, five months after the extent and impact of the water
leakage had been
noticed. The period between the realisation of the
major water leakages and the time of institution of these proceedings
barely displays
the urgency alleged and relied upon by the Applicant.
[18]
The decision to institute these proceedings, in my view, appears to
have been pre-determined and other
trustees given notification
thereof merely for endorsement by them. The notification, by its
wording, lacks the characteristics of
a resolution that was taken in
a properly constituted meeting of trustees and reads thus;
“
NOTICE TO ALL
TRUSTEES”
“
You
are hereby notified of the Proposed Resolution detailed below.
Please
indicate your agreement to the Proposed Resolution by your
signature
which must be received by the Body Corporate on or before 5
July
2021 (the closing date)”.
[19]
The above statement legitimises the respondents’ contestation of
the existence of the meeting in which
the resolution was taken and
the validity of the resolution
per se
. The failure by the
Applicant to furnish the documentation (minutes of the meeting
wherein the resolution was taken) inter alia,
gives further credence
to the respondents’ contestations of the validity of the
resolution.
FINDINGS
AND CONCLUSION
[20]
It is apparent from the authorities cited in this judgment that the
nature of the disputes in this matter
fall squarely within the ambit
of adjudication by the CSOS. The argument that the Applicant was
entitled to bring these proceedings
to court “
because it can
”
falls in the face of the authorities cited above. The Applicant has
clearly circumvented the mandatory adjudication process of
the CSOS.
I consequently decline to entertain the matter.
COSTS
[21]
It is trite that costs follow the outcome of the case. Each party in
these proceedings has asked for
costs to be awarded against the other
on a punitive scale. I can find no reason why the Applicant should
not be ordered to pay the
costs of this application.
ORDER
[22]
Following the findings in this judgment, the following order is made:
1. The
matter is not urgent.
2. The
application is dismissed.
3. The
Applicant is ordered to pay the costs on an opposed party and party
scale.
M.
MBONGWE J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA.
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
Advocate S.W. Davies
Instructed
by:
Izak Du Pisanie, Loock Du Pisanie Inc.
Suite
2, First Floor, 476 King’s Highway,
Lynnwood, PRETORIA
.
For
the Respondents:
Advocate N.L. Buthelezi
Instructed
by:
Gwina Attorneys Incorporated.
Suite
22, Second Floor
135
Daisy Street
Sandown,
Sandton
c/o
Gwebu Inc. Attorneys
Block
1, Ground Floor, Corobay Corner
169
Corobay Avenue
Menlyn
Pretoria,
0181
Matter
heard on: 27 July 2021
JUDGMENT
HANDED DOWN/ELECTRONICALLY TRANSMITTED TO THE PARTIES ON THE 21
st
JANUARY 2022.
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