Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 592South Africa
Kosmos Ridge Homeowners Association v Nyabonda and Others (009404/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 592 (17 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Kosmos Ridge Homeowners Association v Nyabonda and Others (009404/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 592 (17 August 2022)
Kosmos Ridge Homeowners Association v Nyabonda and Others (009404/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 592 (17 August 2022)
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sino date 17 August 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number
: 009404/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
17
AUGUST 2022
In
the matter between:
KOSMOS
RIDGE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION
APPLICANT
and
BRYAN
NYASHAZASHE NYABONDA
FIRST RESPONDENT
(Identity
Number: [....])
KINTANA
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
RENEE
MOLL
ATTORNEYS THIRD
RESPONDENT
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, PRETORIA
FOURTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI
J
Delivered:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e-mail. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed
to be 10h00 on 17 August 2022.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The Applicant approached Court on an urgent basis seeking, amongst
others, to interdict
and restrain the third Respondent from paying
out the proceeds of the sale of a property belonging to the Second
Respondent, a
duly incorporated private company, in order to recover
monies due and owing by the First Respondent to the Applicant.
[2]
The urgency of the matter was based on the imminent transfer of the
property in question
and the subsequent pay out of the proceeds
thereof. The Court having satisfied itself that the transfer of the
property was indeed
imminent, and that the Applicant will not be
afforded substantial redress in due course, made a ruling that the
matter was urgent
enough to be heard in the urgent Court.
[3]
The application was opposed by the First and Second Respondents only,
who for ease
of reference are referred to collectively, in this
judgment, as the Respondents. The Respondents filed separate notices
to oppose
the application and answering affidavits, but were, at the
hearing of the matter represented by the same counsel.
[4]
Of concern however, was that the Respondents had filed their notices
to oppose the
application as well as their respective answering
affidavits out of time, without applying for condonation. The
Applicant had also
served the Second Respondent with a rule 7 notice
which had not been replied to. When the matter appeared in Court the
Respondents
had not filed applications for condonation, nor had the
Second Respondent replied to the rule 7 notice.
[5]
Due to the above irregularities, the Applicant’s counsel wanted
that the matter
be proceeded with, on an unopposed basis. Counsel
further sought to have the answering affidavit of the Second
Respondent to be
regarded
post non scripto
by the Court, as it
had not been properly commissioned. The Court was made aware of the
discrepancy in the commissioning of the
answering affidavit, in that,
it was signed electronically by the deponent and signed in manuscript
by the commissioner of oaths.
It meant that the deponent to the
answering affidavit did not sign the answering affidavit in the
presence of the commissioner
of oaths as is required in law.
[6]
Counsel who appeared on behalf of the Respondents, sought an
indulgence from the Court
to file the power of attorney in reply to
the rule 7 notice, which indulgence was allowed. The resolution of
the Second Respondent
which appointed the Second Respondent's current
attorneys of record as the legal representative of the Second
Respondent, was,
consequently, uploaded on Caselines.
[7]
The Respondents’ counsel, further, sought an indulgence from
the Court to accept
the respective answering affidavits of the
Respondents without the required application for condonation. Counsel
contended that
if the Court was not inclined to grant such indulgence
that the deponent to the Second Respondent’s answering
affidavit would
be called in to give oral evidence.
[8]
What became insurM[....]able for the Respondents’ counsel was
that due to the
issue of urgency, the matter could not be postponed
to give the Respondents time to apply for condonation. More
insuperable was
the defect in the Second Respondent’s answering
affidavit, the result of which was that there was, in fact, no
answering
affidavit before the Court.
[9]
Having conceded that the matter could not be proceeded with on the
affidavits as they
stood, without condonation being granted, counsel
for the Respondents raised a point
in limine
on behalf of the
Second Respondent. It, however, meant that both the answering
affidavits of the Respondents were
post non scripto
and, thus,
no longer before the Court; and, that the First Respondent was also,
not before Court. The point
in limine
, only salvaged the
Second Respondent’s case in that the point
in limine
could be argued from the bar without reference to the Second
Respondent’s answering affidavit.
THE
ISSUE FOR DETERMINATION
[10]
On the point of law raised by the Second Respondent’s counsel,
it was contended that, in
the circumstances of this matter, there is
no ground in law that entitles the Applicant to interdict the payment
of the proceeds
of the property of the Second Respondent, that is a
company with juristic rights. Eventually, this was the only issue
that the
Court had to decide. The effect thereof is that, should this
point be dismissed by the Court, the application was to be granted
on
the basis of the Applicant’s founding affidavit.
BACKGROUND
[11]
The application originates from a debt incurred by the First
Respondent in failing to pay the
levies that are due and payable to
the Applicant. The Applicant is the Homeowners Association of
K[....]mos Ridge Township. One
of the Applicant’s duties as a
Homeowners Association is to ensure that all its members pay their
levies on a timely basis
and without any undue delay.
[12]
The First Respondent is a registered owner of an erf in K[....]mos
Ridge Township and is, thus,
a member of the Applicant. The
First Respondent is, in terms of the rules of the Applicant,
obligated to pay all the
levies charged by the directors of the
Applicant. The First Respondent has fallen into arrears with the
payment of his levies and
for the past eleven years, the Applicant
has litigated against the First Respondent in order to obtain payment
of such levies.
The Applicant has, as a result, obtained
various judgments against the First Respondent for the unpaid levies,
charges, interest
and legal costs. At the time of the issuing of this
application, the First Respondent was said to be indebted to the
Applicant
in the sum of R 424 268.43, being for the said arrear
levies, charges, interest and legal costs.
[13]
The property in question is described as SS21 Melodie Waters
(“Melodie Waters”) and
is owned by the Second Respondent,
a private company duly incorporated in terms of the laws of the
Republic of South Africa. As
it will more clearly appear hereunder,
it is the proceeds of this property that the Applicant wants the
payment thereof interdicted.
[14]
The Second Respondent comes into the picture in that the Applicant
alleges that the First Respondent
gave an undertaking to the
Applicant that he (the First Respondent) will use the proceeds of the
sale of Melodie Waters property
which as it has been said, is owned
by the Second Respondent, to settle the First Respondent’s debt
with the Applicant. The
said property has now been sold, and is due
to be transferred into the name of the new owner, but the First
Respondent is said
to be refusing to confirm his undertaking that the
proceeds of the property will be used to settle the Applicant’s
debt.
[15]
The First Respondent was, at one time, a director of the Second
Respondent, together with one
Sona Pillay (“Mr Pillay”),
but has since resigned leaving Mr Pillay as the sole director of the
Second Respondent.
The First Respondent and Mr Pillay are, also, two
of the four trustees of a trust, The Tomi Trust, that is the sole
shareholder
of the Second Respondent. The First Respondent is the
signatory, on behalf of the Second Respondent, of a Mandate given to
Pam
Golding Estate Agents (“the Agents”) to sell the
Melodie Waters property (“the Mandate”). The First
Respondent
was duly authorised to sign the Mandate by a Resolution
passed at a meeting of directors of Kintana Investments Pty Ltd (the
Second
Respondent) on 21 June 2022 (“the Resolution”).
[16]
The Applicant avers that it was compelled to institute these
proceedings because the First Respondent
had previously offered to
sell immovable properties registered in his personal name, that of
Kintana (the Second Respondent) and
Victoria Trust, and would then
effect payment of the proceeds to the Applicant until his
indebtedness has been extinguished. Despite
this express undertaking
provided by the First Respondent, the First Respondent proceeded to
sell one of his properties known as
[….] M[....] K[....]
without informing the Applicant, and also, failed to effect payment
of the proceeds of that sale to
the Applicant.
[17]
It is, also, alleged that in order to avoid being sequestrated by the
Applicant, the First Respondent
gave an express undertaking to the
Applicant that the proceeds of the sale of the Melodie Waters
property will be paid to the Applicant.
Furthermore, it is alleged
that the First Respondent, was in terms of the Resolutions signed by
the Second Respondent, provided
with the express authority to deal
with the proceeds of the sale of the immovable properties.
[18]
The Applicant contends that it is as a result of the aforesaid, that
it approached the Court
to declare that the proceeds of the sale of
the Melodie Waters property be paid to the Applicant in reduction of
the First Respondent's
indebtedness to the Applicant,
alternatively,
that such amount be retained on trust with the Third Respondent,
pending a reconciliation of the account which might result in
such
lower amount as agreed between the Applicant and the First
Respondent.
ANALYSIS
[19]
It is a principle of our common law that, a company, being a legal
persona, cannot contract in
person but must do so through a person
acting under its authority. Such authorisation must be given by means
of a directors’
resolution expressly stating what is expected
of the person so authorised. In this matter, the Second Respondent,
as a company,
mandated the First Respondent to deal with the Agents
to have the Melodie Waters property sold. The Mandate as it has been
stated,
was issued in terms of a Resolution taken at the directors’
meeting of 21 June 2022. The Resolution
authorises
the First Respondent, in his capacity as a director, to sign the
relevant documents which may be necessary for the registration
of the
transfer of Melodie Waters property to Nonhlanhla Eileen Makgobatlou.
[20]
Counsel for the Second Respondent’s argument is that it is
common cause that the Applicant
does not have a dispute with the
Second Respondent, and, there is, therefore, no basis upon which the
Applicant may interdict the
proceeds of the property which belongs to
the Second Respondent. The Second Respondent, as a company, has its
own rights as a juristic
person, and the settlement agreement, which
the Applicant concluded with the First Respondent has nothing to do
with the Second
Respondent. According to counsel, the First
Respondent who owes the Applicant, was a director of the Second
Respondent and has
since resigned.
[21]
The high watermark of the Applicant’s case is that the First
Respondent was authorised
by the Second Respondent to deal with the
proceeds of the sale of the Melodie Waters property. For the reasons
that follow hereunder,
this argument by the Applicant cannot be
sustained.
[22]
Firstly, there is no evidence presented in the Applicant’s
papers which indicates that
the Second Respondent clearly mandated
the First Respondent to deal with the proceeds of the Melodie Waters
property sale. Secondly,
there is nothing in the Resolution, that
mandates the First Respondent to deal with the Agents, authorising
the First Respondent
to deal with the proceeds of that sale. In order
for the First Respondent to deal with the proceeds of the sale he
must be expressly
so mandated in the Resolution.
[23]
According to the Applicant, it should be assumed that the Second
Respondent mandated the First
Respondent to deal with the proceeds of
the sale of Melodie Waters because the First Respondent has been
dealing with not only
the Agent but also with the transferring
attorney of the property throughout the process of the sale of the
property. The First
Respondent, it is contended, has also instructed
the transferring attorney to pay out the proceeds of the sale to some
creditors
including H[....], a school attended by the First
Respondent’s son. This, then, according to the Applicant,
entitles the
Applicant to interdict the pay out of the proceeds.
[24]
If it is to be accepted that the First Respondent was authorised to
deal with the proceeds of
the sale, as suggested by the Applicant,
the onus is on the Applicant to establish that in the Resolution, the
First Respondent
was mandated to pay the Applicant’s debt. It
might be so that the Second Respondent authorised the First
Respondent to deal
with the proceeds of the sale, but the question
is, was it a blanket authorisation or the authorisation was to deal
with the proceeds
in a certain way. Without an answer to this
question, this Court cannot just assume that the authorisation
granted to the First
Respondent to deal with the said proceeds, if
ever there was any, included the payment of the Applicant’s
debt.
[25]
Except for H[....], there is, no evidence in the papers that shows
who the creditors that were
to be paid by the transferring attorneys
were. The creditors that the Third Respondent was instructed to pay
could have been the
Second Respondent’s creditors, which the
First Respondent would have been entitled to pay. It is common cause
that the Applicant
is not a creditor of the Second Respondent, as
such, it would have not been wrong if the Third Respondent was
instructed not to
pay the Applicant.
[26]
The Applicant’s other argument is that it can interdict the
proceeds of the sale, even
if Mr Pillay is now the only director of
the Second Respondent, because the First Respondent is the trustee of
The Tomi Trust,
which is the sole shareholder of the Second
Respondent. This argument, in this Court’s view has no
substance.
[27]
It is trite that a trustee cannot bind the trust acting alone but
must act together and jointly
with the other trustees or he must act
on
the written authority given by all the trustees, acting jointly.
[1]
[28]
In is not in dispute that the First Respondent is not the only
trustee of The Tomi Trust, he
is one of four trustees. In order for
the undertaking that the First Respondent has made to the Applicant
to be valid, the other
trustees must have made it jointly with the
First Respondent. Additionally, in order for the First
Respondent to deal with
the proceeds of the sale of the property, he
must have been duly and expressly authorised to do so by the other
trustees, acting
jointly. It has already been shown that this was not
the case in this instance.
[29]
In its own words, the Applicant contends that during 2018 the
Applicant attached a property owned
by the Second Respondent,
situated at number [....] S[....] Street, S[....]2, and wanted to
sell it in execution. However, in an
interpleader summons that was
issued by Mr Pillay it was established that the attached property
indeed belonged to the second respondent
and was, as a result
released from attachment. Melodie Waters as a property owned by the
Second Respondent must be dealt in the
same manner as the
abovementioned property.
[30]
Over and above that, there is nothing, in the circumstances of this
matter, that entitles the
Applicant to interdict the proceeds of the
sale of property owned by the Second Respondent in order to pay a
debt owed to it by
the First Respondent. Besides, even if it could
have been found that the First Respondent has been authorised to deal
with the
proceeds of the sale of that property, that would not
entitle the Applicant to interdict the said proceeds.
[31]
The Second Respondent’ argument that the Applicant cannot
interdict the proceeds of the
sale of property which belongs to the
Second Respondent, is, in this Court’s view, valid. On this
point alone the application
falls to be dismissed.
[31]
The following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The Applicant is ordered to pay the cost of the Second Respondent.
E.M
KUBUSHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
:
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL:
Adv. A. A. BASSON
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS:
LINDA ERASMUS
ATTORNEYS
FIRST
& SECOND RESPONDENTS’ COUNSEL:
ADV
L. TSHIGOMANA
FIRST
& SECOND RESPONDENTS’ ATTORNEYS
[1]
Thorpe
and Others v Trittenwein and Another
2007
(2) SA 172
(SCA).
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