Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 811South Africa
Tapuch v Trustees For The Time Being of S H Body Corporate 3 and Others (29978/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 811 (24 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Tapuch v Trustees For The Time Being of S H Body Corporate 3 and Others (29978/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 811 (24 October 2022)
Tapuch v Trustees For The Time Being of S H Body Corporate 3 and Others (29978/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 811 (24 October 2022)
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sino date 24 October 2022
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FLYNOTES:
BODY CORPORATE AND CLEARANCE
CERTIFICATE
Property
– Sectional title – Body corporate – Issue of
levy clearance certificate – Owner paid all
dues and wanted
to sell unit – Withholding of certificate cannot be used to
enforce rules – Sectional Titles
Act 95 of 1986, s
15B(3)(a)(i)(aa).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 29978/2022
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
24
October 2022
In
the matter between:
ROBIN
ERNEST TAPUCH
APPLICANT
and
THE
TRUSTEES FOR THE TIME BEING
OF
S[....] H[....] BODY CORPORATE 3
FIRST RESPONDENT
MIDCITY
PROPERTY SERVICES (PTY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
CITY
OF TSHWANE
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant is the owner of Unit [….]
in the Sectional Title Scheme known as S[....] H[....] W[....]
E[....]. The first
respondent is the body corporate of the said
Sectional Title Scheme. The second respondent is the managing agent
of the first respondent.
[2]
The applicant sold his property during
July 2022 to Mr. and Mrs. Botes. It is common cause that the
applicant has paid all monies
due to the body corporate in respect of
the said unit. The first and second respondents, however, refused to
issue a levy clearance
certificate and the applicant had to revert to
the urgent court to obtain an order directing them to issue such a
levy clearance
certificate. The respondents issued a levy clearance
certificate after the application was issued (‘the first
clearance certificate’).
The applicant accordingly removed the
matter from the urgent court roll and subsequently required the first
respondent to tender
the wasted costs on a party-and-party scale.
[3]
Due to a lapse of time, and events that
cannot be attributed to the applicant, an extended clearance
certificate is now required
before registration of transfer of the
property can be effected. The first respondent refuses to issue the
extended clearance certificate.
The second respondent initially
opposed the application but later filed a notice to abide. It is this
refusal to issue an extended
levy clearance certificate that lies at
the heart of this urgent application. The issue of urgency is
addressed below. It is necessary
to have regard to the events
preceding, and leading to this application.
[4]
On 23 September 2022 the respondents’
attorney of record wrote the following to the applicant’s
attorney of record:
‘
As
recorded in the paragraph on page 2 of our letter of 14 September
2022, our client will withdraw the previous levy Clearance
Certificate that was issued by them
should your client fail to
withdraw the urgent application which they have not done yet
.
Your client is hereby afforded his last opportunity to withdraw the
urgent application against our client which notice of withdrawal
of
the application should be filed by no later than Monday 26 September
2022 at 12:00, failing which the levy clearance certificate
will be
formally withdrawn …’ (My emphasis.)
[5]
A second letter, dated 26 September
2022, directed to the applicant’s attorney followed. The
applicant quoted a passage from
the letter:
‘
Our
client previously indicated that they will not tender your client’s
wasted costs and
should your client persist with such prayer
our client will proceed to withdraw the previous levy clearance
certificate that was issued, and, it goes without saying, not issue
an extended certificate.’ (My emphasis.)
[6]
The first respondent contends that the
applicant failed to submit approved as-built building plans, and that
it is justified to
withhold the levy clearance certificate until the
applicant complies by submitting such plan. The first respondent
wrote on 31
August 2022 to the unit owners in the scheme:
‘
Based
on the article published by Paddocks, titled: Withholding a levy
clearance certificate until plans are approved … The
Trustees
of Body Corporate 3 resolved to request approved Building Plans
before the release of a Clearance certificate.’
[7]
The first and second respondent’s
initial refusal to issue the levy clearance certificate was also
premised on the supposition
that the applicant failed to provide
‘approved as-built building plans’ to the first
respondent in respect of a roof
that he erected during 2016. They
contended that the third respondent should have approved the
applicant’s as-built building
plans pertaining to the roof
structure.
[8]
The
applicant denied that it was necessary to obtain building plans for
the minor building works done,
[1]
but provided an undertaking by the purchasers of the unit, Mr. and
Mrs. Botha, in terms whereof they declared themselves willing
to pay
all and any costs related to the submission of the as-built building
plans, should it be required. The first levy clearance
certificate
was subsequently issued.
[9]
The applicant was not intimidated by the
first respondent’s threat to withdraw the first clearance
certificate and issued
this urgent court application. The first
respondent opposes the application and issued a counter-application
to have the first
levy clearance certificate set aside. The first
respondent contends that it is obliged to refuse to issue a clearance
certificate
in circumstances where it is of the view that the
applicant failed to adhere to any law relating to the common property
or to any
improvement of land comprised in the common property.
Discussion
[10]
Section 15B(3)(a)(i)(aa)
of the
Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986
(“STA”) provides as
follows:
'The
registrar [of deeds] shall not register a transfer of a unit or an
undivided share therein unless there is produced to him
─
(a)
a conveyancer's certificate confirming that as at date of
registration ─
(i)(aa)
if a Body Corporate is deemed to be established in terms of
section
36(1)
, that
Body Corporate has certified that all moneys due
to
the Body Corporate by the transferor in respect of the said unit have
been paid
,
or
that provision has been made to the satisfaction of the Body
Corporate for the payment thereof;' (my emphasis)
[11]
Section
15B(3)(a)(i)(aa)
of the STA is described as an embargo or restraint
provision.
[2]
The Supreme Court
of Appeal in
Willow
Waters Homeowners Association (Pty) Ltd v Koka N.O. and Others,
[3]
dealing with certain conditions included in a Deed of Transfer,
stated the following regarding
s15B(3(a)(i)(aa):
‘
[24]
The effect of the embargo [a condition incorporated in a title deed]
is akin to that of the embargos contained in s 118 of
the Local
Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 (the Municipal Systems
Act) and s 15B(3)(
a
)(i)(
aa
)
of the
Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986
. These provisions
respectively prohibit the Registrar from registering the transfer of
immovable property except on production
of a certificate issued by
the municipality or a conveyancer confirming that all moneys due to
the municipality or a body corporate
have been fully paid.
[25]
It is accepted that these statutory embargoes serve a vital and
legitimate purpose as effective security for debt recovery
in respect
of municipal service fees and contributions to bodies corporate for
water, electricity, rates and taxes etc. Thus, they
ensure the
continued supply of such services and the economic viability and
sustainability of municipalities and bodies corporate
in the interest
of all the inhabitants in the country. And this is particularly
so in the circumstances of insolvency, when
an effective legal remedy
against an insolvent is most needed.’ (Footnotes omitted)
[12]
In
Willows
the SCA categorised
s 15B(3)(a)(i)(aa)
as effective security for debt
recovery. This is consonant with the ordinary wording of the section.
It is not necessary for purposes
of this judgment to analyse the
meaning of the phrase ‘all monies due to the Body Corporate…
in respect of the said
unit.’ The applicant relies on
s
15
B(3)(a)(i)(aa) of the STA.
[13]
The first respondent relies on s 3(1)(p)
of the
Sectional Title Schemes
Management Act
8 of 2011 (‘STSMA’).
The section provides as follows:
‘
(1)
A body corporate must perform the functions entrusted to it by or
under this Act or the rules, and such functions include:
…
.
(p)
to ensure compliance with any law relating to the common property or
to any improvement of land comprised in the common property.’
[14]
The first respondent submits that
because the trustees are obliged to ensure that the buildings in the
scheme are properly approved,
they are obligated to enforce
compliance. On this premise the first respondent contends that the
necessary steps it can take to
enforce compliance include but are not
limited to refusing to issue a levy clearance certificate. Counsel
for the first respondent
submits that s 15B(3)(a)(i)(aa) does not
oblige a body corporate to issue a levy clearance certificate when
all the monies due
to it is paid.
[15]
The question that arises in this case is
whether a body corporate may withhold a levy clearance certificate
where all the monies
due to it has been paid because the owner of the
unit who wants to sell the unit has allegedly transgressed the rules
of the scheme
or allegedly failed to comply with any law relating to
the common property or to any improvement of land comprised in the
common
property.
[16]
Although
neither of the counsel referred thereto, it is apposite to have
regard to the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
City
of Cape Town v Real People Housing (Pty) Ltd,
[4]
dealing
with the question as to whether a municipality is entitled to use a
rates clearance certificate provided for in terms of
s 118(1) of the
Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 (‘LGMSA’)
as leverage to compel the payment of debts
incurred more than two
years prior to the request for the certificate, or, to re-phrase the
question for the context of the current
application, for a purpose
not stated in the section. The municipality’s stance was that
the clearance certificate would
not be issued until all debts have
been paid irrespective of when or by whom it was incurred.
[17]
Section 118(1) of the LGMSA provides as
follows:
‘
(1)
A registrar of deeds may not register the transfer of property except
on production to that registrar of deeds of a prescribed
certificate-
(a)
issued by the municipality or municipalities in which the property is
situated; and
(b)
which certifies that all amounts that became due in connection with
that property for municipal service fees, surcharge fees,
property
rates, and other municipal taxes, levies and duties during the two
years preceding the date of application for the certificate
have been
paid fully.’
[18]
Nugent
JA explained that municipalities are obliged by the LGMSA to collect
monies that become payable to them for property rates
and taxes for
the provision of municipal services. For that purpose, municipalities
are required to adopt, maintain and implement
a credit-control and
debt-collection policy complying with various criteria, and to adopt
bylaws that give effect to the policy
and its implementation and
enforcement.
[5]
To assist in the
fulfilment of that obligation, the effect of s 118(1) of the LGMSA is
to provide municipalities with the capacity
to block the transfer of
ownership of the property until the debts have been repaid in certain
circumstances.
[6]
[19]
Nugent
JA referred to the judgment of the Constitutional Court in
Mkontwana
v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality et al,
[7]
where it was recognised that s 118(1) of the LGMSA has the effect of
depriving owners of one of the incidents of ownership. He
explained
that it is a trite principle of our law that statutes that intrude
upon established rights ought to be strictly construed:
‘‘
Innes
CJ expressed that as follows in
Dadoo Ltd and Others v
Krugersdorp Municipal Council
, and it has been repeated in many
subsequent cases:
'It
is a wholesome rule of our law which requires a strict construction
to be placed upon statutory provisions which interfere with
elementary rights. And it should be applied not only in interpreting
a doubtful phrase, but in ascertaining the intent of the law
as a
whole.'’
[8]
[20]
Nugent
JA found that municipalities are obliged to issue a clearance
certificate when all the amounts that became due in connection
with
the concerned property during the two years preceding the date of
application for a clearance certificate have been paid fully.
[9]
[21]
The
similarity between s 118(1) of the LGMSA and s 15B(3)(a)(i)(aa) of
the STA is obvious, and was recognised by the Supreme Court
of Appeal
in
Willows
,
supra
.
It is trite that when interpreting a statute, the language in the
legislation should be read in its ordinary sense. The words
must be
given their ordinary meaning in accordance with the context in which
they are used.
[10]
The
context within which the provision appears, the apparent purpose to
which it is directed and the material known to those
responsible for
its production must also be considered.
[11]
[22]
The purpose of s 15B(3)(a)(i)(aa) has
been held by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Willows
to be the assurance of the economic viability and sustainability of
bodies corporate. The ordinary meaning of the words in the
context
that they are used indicates that the sole purpose of a levy
clearance certificate is to ensure that the monies due to
a body
corporate are paid before the property is transferred to a new owner,
or that provision has been made to the satisfaction
of the body
corporate for the payment thereof. To use the levy clearance
certificate as leverage to enforce, compliance with rules
or any
applicable law, would be to unilaterally extend the purpose for which
s 15B(3)(a)(i)(aa) was promulgated by the legislature.
It would
nullify the express language of the section, and does not accord with
a strict construal of the section.
[23]
If the legislature intended the
clearance certificate to be used as a mechanism to ensure compliance
with all the rules of a sectional
titles scheme, or any applicable
law, it would not have limited the scope of the clearance certificate
to ‘all monies due’
to a body corporate. The legislature
would have required that a clearance certificate from the body
corporate, confirming that
the rules of the scheme and every
applicable law had been adhered to, be submitted before the transfer
of the property could ensue.
[24]
The
submission that the body corporate is entitled to withhold a levy
clearance certificate to compel compliance with amongst others,
zoning requirements in terms of the City of Tshwane Town Planning
Scheme,
[12]
because the body
corporate must ensure compliance with any law relating to the common
property or to any improvement of land comprised
in the common
property, indicates, amongst others, a misconception of the body
corporate’s responsibility and fiduciary obligations.
[25]
A
body corporate cannot, if it is convinced that a specific rule or law
was contravened, sit back and wait for the day that the
recalcitrant
unit owner wants to sell the unit, and then use the levy clearance
certificate as a mechanism to compel compliance.
Yacoob J’s
observation in
Mkontwana
applies to the factual context of this application:
[13]
‘
The
applicants emphasise that a municipality cannot sit by and
allow consumption charges to escalate regardless and in the
knowledge that recovery will be possible whenever the property falls
to be transferred.
They are right.
The municipality must
comply with its duties and take reasonable steps
to collect
amounts that are due'. (My emphasis.)
[26]
The
body corporate cannot sit idle. It must demand that any transgression
of the rules or applicable law, be remedied as soon as
it occurs.
When the transgression relates to buildings that are not compliant
with applicable statutory provisions, the body corporate
must demand
that an owner rectifies the position and do whatever is required to
make the property compliant with the law. When
the issue relates to
outstanding building plans, the owner must be ordered to submit and
arrange for the approval of its building
plans. Where an owner
threatens legal action or refuses to start the process of legalising
the buildings, and a dispute arises,
the matter can be referred to
the Community Schemes Ombud Service.
[14]
In this context it is found that a body corporate is obligated to
issue a levy clearance certificate if all the monies due to it
is
paid.
[27]
In the current matter, the first
respondent was provided with an undertaking by the purchasers of the
property that they would ensure
compliance with any law, that was not
complied with regarding the building plans of the unit. This prompted
the body corporate
to issue the first levy clearance certificate.
From the correspondence between the parties’ attorneys of
record, it is evident
that the risk of having to pay the costs of the
first urgent court application prompted the first respondent to
attempt to avoid
any possible future liability by using the extended
clearance certificate, and the threat to withdraw the first levy
clearance
certificate, as leverage. This conduct is frowned upon and
was the deciding factor in considering to deal with this application
in the urgent court. It is unbecoming of a legal practitioner, albeit
that the legal practitioner acts on instructions, to resort
to what
can be described as extortion, in an attempt to prevent a possible
future dispute regarding the liability of costs wherein
its client
may be involved.
[28]
This then, leaves the
counter-application wherein the first respondent seeks an order for
the clearance certificate dated 31 August
2022 (the first clearance
certificate) to be set aside. For the same reasons as alluded to
above, this application stands to be
dismissed.
[29]
As for costs, the attempt to avoid the
possible future liability for costs by informing the applicant that
an extended levy clearance
certificate would not be provided if the
applicant persists with the request that the first respondent tenders
the wasted costs
of the first urgent court application and that the
respondent would proceed to withdraw the first levy clearance
certificate, compels
a punitive costs order to be granted in the
applicant’s urgent application.
[30]
As for the costs relating to the
counter-application, I accept that the respondent’s
counter-application may have been informed
by the article published
by Paddock. The manner in which the first respondent approached this
matter is, however, as stated above,
to be frowned upon and such
future conduct is to be discouraged. The applicant does, however, not
seek that a punitive costs order
be granted in relation to the
counter-application. As a result, I will not grant a punitive costs
order in relation to the counter-application.
Since the second
respondent could not issue a levy clearance certificate in defiance
of the first respondent’s instructions,
it cannot be held
liable for any costs, not even the costs incurred prior to the date
of the notice to abide.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The application is regarded as urgent
and any non-compliance with the Uniform Rules of court is condoned;
2.
The first respondent is directed and
compelled to immediately authorise the second respondent to issue an
extended clearance certificate
in respect of the applicant’s
immovable property, i.e. Unit [….] in the Sectional Title
Scheme known as S[....] H[....]
Body Corporate 3 (‘the
applicant’s property’);
3.
The second respondent is directed and
compelled to immediately issue an extended clearance certificate in
respect of the applicant’s
property and provide such clearance
certificate to the applicant or the conveyancer attending to the
transfer of the property,
after it has obtained the first
respondent’s authorisation;
4.
The first respondent is to pay the costs
of the applicant’s application on an attorney-and-client scale;
5.
The
first respondent’s counter-application is dismissed with costs.
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
For
the applicant:
Adv. JA du Plessis
Instructed
by:
Gouse van Aarde Inc.
For
the respondent:
Adv. M Van Vuren
Instructed
by:
Weavind and Weavind Inc.
Date
of the hearing:
18 October 2022
Date
of judgment:
24 October 2022
[1]
The applicant states that he erected the roof structure in 2016
after having obtained the approval of both the Body Corporate
and
the Home Owners Association of the first respondent. He claims that
he has not altered or extended the footprint of his property.
He
erected a roof structure over an existing patio which formed part of
the initial building plans. The roof structure constitutes
minor
building works that do not require approved building plans from the
third respondent.
[2]
G
J Pienaar and JG Horn
Sectional
Titles and other fragmented property schemes, 2
nd
ed.,
2020,
JUTA, 224.
[3]
2015
(5) SA 304
(SCA) paras [24], [25].
[4]
2010
(5) SA 196 (SCA).
[5]
At
para [1].
[6]
At
para [2].
[7]
Mkontwana
v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality and Another; Bissett and
Others v Buffalo City Municipality and Others; Transfer
Rights
Action Campaign and Others v MEC, Local Government and Housing,
Gauteng, and Others (KwaZulu-Natal Law Society and Msunduzi
Municipality as Amici Curiae)
2005
(1) SA 530 (CC).
[8]
Real
People
at
par [9].
[9]
At
par [16].
[10]
Bellevue
Motors CC v Johannesburg City Council
1994 (4) SA 339
(W) 342F-G;
The
Body Corporate Marsh Rose v Steinmuller and Others
(A5002/2020) [2021] ZAGPJHC 440 (23 September 2021) at par [16].
[11]
Body
Corporate of Marsh Rose, supra,
at
par [16].
[12]
Pienaar
and Horn,
Sectional
Titles and other fragmented property schemes
at 109 explain that the only functions of local authorities in
relation to sectional title schemes are to approve building plans
and condone irregularities in the scheme. Any irregularities can be
condoned by the local authority by issuing a certificate
of
condonation, provided that no condonation may be given for
non-compliance with a national building regulation regarding the
strength and stability of a building.
[13]
Mkontwana,
supra,
at
par [49].
[14]
See
Pienaar and Horn
Sectional
Titles and other fragmented property schemes
at 268, where they refer to
Mineur
v Baydunes Body Corporate and Others
2019 (5) SA 260
(WCC). In this case the court heard an appeal from
the Ombud Service regarding the question as to whether the change of
the use
of a garage into living quarters was valid or not.
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