Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 372South Africa
Ralebipi v Beau Rivage Homeowners Association (A159/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 372 (19 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 December 2022
Headnotes
judgment application granted by the . leaned Magistrate A E Smit sitting in the Brits Magistrates Court, against the Appellant in favour of the Respondent in tile sum of R186, 926-17. 2. The Appellant is the owner of a property known as 1[…] Beau Rivage, estate D'Afrique, Hartbeespoort and has been the registered owner since 2010. The Respondent is the homeowners association is respect of the estate where the said property is situated. As such, the Appellant is a member of the Respondent homeowners association. 3. A combined summons was issued on the 10th of June 2019 in which the Respondent claimed R186, 926--17 against the Appellant, which amount is made up of four components as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ralebipi v Beau Rivage Homeowners Association (A159/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 372 (19 December 2022)
Ralebipi v Beau Rivage Homeowners Association (A159/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 372 (19 December 2022)
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sino date 19 December 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE
HIGH
COURT
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A159/2020
DATE
OF HEARING: 17
TH
November 2022
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
REVISED
DATE:
19 DECEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
MATOME
SOLOMON RALEBIPI
Appellant
and
BEAU
RIVAGE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION
Respondent
JUDGMENT
CORAM:
CAJEE. AJ (MOSHOANA J CONCURRING)
1.
This is an appeal against a summary judgment application
granted by
the . leaned Magistrate A E Smit sitting in the Brits Magistrates
Court, against the Appellant in favour of the Respondent
in tile sum
of R186, 926-17.
2.
The Appellant is the owner of a property
known as 1[…]
Beau Rivage, estate D'Afrique, Hartbeespoort and has been the
registered owner since 2010. The Respondent
is the homeowners
association is respect of the estate where the said property is
situated. As such, the Appellant is a member
of the Respondent
homeowners association.
3.
A combined summons was issued on the 10
th
of June 2019 in
which the Respondent claimed R186, 926--17 against the Appellant,
which amount is made up of four components as
follows:
3.1.
Arrear monthly levies of R 93 000-00 for the period
20
th
September
2016 to 20 May 2019;
3.2.
Arrear monthly CSOS (community scheme
ombud
service) levies of
R1200-00 for the period 20 January 2017 until 20
th
May
2019. The monthly CSOS levy is alleged to be R40 00 per month for
this period.
3.3.
A late building completion levy of R 66 000-00 for the period
20
th
September 2016 to 20 May 2019. This levy is
calculated at R2000-00 per month for this period.
3.4.
Outstanding water and electricity consumed on the property in the sum
of R113 399,98, allegedly based
on actual meter readings.
3.5.
It is further alleged in the particulars of claim that during the
period September 2016 to May 2019
the Appellant made payments which
are reflected in annexure BR5. Of this, an amount of R86,673-81 was
allocated to the credit of
the Plaintiff in respect of the period
claimed in this action as reflected in annexure BR4. The balance was
allegedly allocated
to amounts owing in respect of a previous period
and in respect of which separate actions were allegedly instituted.
4.
There were five annexes attached to the particulars
of claim. They
are:
4.1.
Annexure "BR.1" which is a deeds search proving that the
Appellant
is the registered owner of Erf 1[…], Beau Rivage
Township. This is not disputed by the Appellant.
4.2.
Annexure "BR2" is a copy of the Memorandum of Incorporation
of the
Respondent containing the terms and conditions to which
members of the Respondent, including the Appellant, were bound by
virtue
of their membership.
4.3.
Annexure "BR3" is a copy of the Village Rules which include
additional
rules to which members of the Respondent are bound.
4.4.
Annexure "BR4" is a copy of the reconciliation account in
respect
of the Appellant compiled by the Respondent for the period 20
September 2016 to 20 May 2019. This reconciliation account is made
up
of eight columns with the following headings:
DATE
LEVY
INTEREST
LEGAL COSTS
ELECTRICITY AND WATER
LATE BUILDING
csos
PAYMENTS AND CREDITS
However only the amounts
set out in columns 2, 5, 6, 7 and 8 formed the subject matter of the
particulars of claim. The amounts
reflected in column\:.3 and 4 did
not form the subject matter of the particulars of claim.
4.5.
Annexure "BR5" being a copy of the detailed ledger in
respect of
the Appellant kept by the Respondent for the period 20
August 2016 to 20 May 2019.
5.
In response to the Appellant filing a notice of
intention to defend a
summary judgment application was launched by the Respondent.
6.
In the affidavit resisting summary Judgment the
following defences
are raised:
6.1.
that annexure BR5 is replete with legal fees which were not taxed,
and that
there was no liquid document underpinning this indebtedness.
6.2.
that the amount claimed for the late building levies is not a
liquidated claim
as there are no allegations in the particulars of
claim that bring the dwelling within the jurisdictional parameters
set out in
the allegations in two similarly numbered paragraphs 6.5
of the particulars of claim which read as follows:
"Construction
of
the
dwelling must
be
completed
within
18
(eighteen) months from date of stand
handover"
and
"a
penalty
levy will be imposed on
owners who have not
completed
a
dwelling within (18) eighteen months from date of
site handover".
6.3.
It is further claimed in the affidavit that it is common cause that
"my house
is
complete because I am residing in
it”.
6.4.
The electricity accounts proving that the readings contained in
reconciliation
statement belong 10 the property are not attached.
Hence, it is alleged, that the claim for electricity is disputed and
not liquid.
6.4.
That the total of amounts as reflected.in annexure "BR4"
does not agree with the amounts claimed in the summons.
6.5.
That the particulars of claim are excipiable
7.
In a short but comprehensive judgment the learned
magistrate
dismissed the opposition to the summary judgment application as not
displaying a bona fide defence in respect of any
of the grounds
raised. In doing so the magistrate found that:
7.1.
None of the Plaintiff's claims relates to outstanding legal
costs,
but that the claims relate to arrear levies, late building penalty
levies, arrear CSOS levies and water and electricity
consumed on the
premises.
7.2.
The statement of material facts (particulars of claim) have
to be
read with the annexures attached thereto. When read together with
annexure BR4, where the calculations in respect of each
claim are set
out, it is clear that the amounts claimed are ascertainable by mere
arithmetical calculation.
7.3.
That the appellant does not dispute being the registered owner of the
property, that he
is a member of the Respondent, that he must abide
by the memorandum of incorporation and village rules, and that the
respondent
is entitled to late building completion levies. The
magistrate further found that the appellant ought to have completed
the construction
of the dwelling within eighteen months of the
handover of the stand to him in terms of the said memorandum of
incorporation and
village rules, as alleged in the particulars of
claim, and is as a consequence liable for same for the period 20
September 2016
to 20 May 2019. The magistrate found that the fact
that the Appellant may be residing on the property is of no
consequence, as
he didn't provide an inspection release certificate
issued by the aesthetics committee and an occupation certificate by
the Madibeng
Local Authority as required by the memorandum of
incorporation and village rules as proof that the building completion
requirements
had been complied with.
7.4.
that the claim for electricity consumption had been properly
quantified in
the particulars of claim read together with tile
annexes.
7.5.
that the amounts claimed under !he various heads did correspond with
the totals
in annexure "BR4".
7.6.
that an emailed letter attached
w
the affidavit resisting
summary judgment in which the Appellant seeks a debatement of account
related to earlier claims in respect
of which separate actions were
instituted.
8.
In the Notice of Appeal as well as the heads of
argument the
Appellant persisted with the defences raised in the affidavit
resisting summary judgment, but concentrated on the
following:
8.1.
that the learned Magistrate misdirected herself in finding that the
Respondent
was not claiming any costs as alleged as Annexure BR4 and
BR5 are inclusive of legal costs.
8.2.
the learned Magistrate misdirected herself in respect of the late
building
penalty levies by "adding allegations that are not
contained in the particulars of claim".
8.3.
that annexure "BR4" and ''BR5" do not support and
complement
each other.
8.4.
that annexure "BR4" has 6 columns and not 4.
8.5.
that the Appellant was entitled to a debatement of account in light
of the
fact that this claim is related to earlier claims brought by
the Respondent against the Appellant.
9.
In her heads of argument, counsel for the Appellant
persisted with
the arguments that the claims were not liquidated, and that the
particulars of claim were excipiable. However at
the hearing of this
matter she abandoned the ground that the claim related to legal costs
which were not taxed.
10.
At the hearing of this matter the Appellant brought an application
for condonation for the late prosecution
of the appeal. This was
strenuously opposed by counsel for the Respondent, who contended that
the appeal had already lapsed and
that it had brought a separate
application for a declarator to this effect, but that the application
was still pending and he wanted
us to rule on it. However, the papers
in respect of this application were not before us and we refused to
entertain same.
11.
While no substantive application for condonation for the late
prosecution
of this appeal was brought, counsel for the Appellant in
separate heads of argument dealt with the reasons why the appeal had
not
been prosecuted timeously. Her submissions were that the Covid 19
lockdown and regulations were to blame for the delay. For reasons
of
convenience we decided to hear the appeal, without deciding on the
issue of condonation or the lapsed appeal.
12.
As pointed out in the Respondent's heads of argument, the question of
whether a claim is liquidated depends on whether it is capable of
prompt ascertainment, which in turn depends on the discretion
of the
court hearing the matter. As long as this discretion is judiciously
exercised, an appeal court is not entitled to disturb
this finding.
13.
The claims were clearly set out in the particulars of claim as
supported by
the relevant columns in annexure BR4 and annexure BR5.
It cannot not be said that the Magistrate did not exercise her
discretion
judiciously. Perhaps a greater degree of precision could
have been exercised in the drafting of the particulars of claim, but
this
does not make them excipiable. A clearer distinction between
payments and credits could have been set out. Further, the reference
to the requirement that the Appellant complete building within
eighteen months of registration of the property in his name finds
no
correlation in the Village Rules. Village Rule 12.3.2 actually
requires a three year period for completion of building. When
asked,
counsel for the Respondent pointed out that the property was
registered in the name of the Appellant in July 2010. Thus,
for the
purposes of this action, it mattered not whether the period was
eighteen months or three years, since it related to a period
between
six and nine years after the property was registered in the
Appellant's name.
14.
The Appellant chose technical attacks on the particulars of claim
rather
than deal with the substance of the allegations. He didn't
deny using electricity and water on the property, but doesn't state
what he believes the correct amount to be. It is still unclear what
the jurisdictional parameters that the Appellant claims needed
to be
present before he could be sued for late penalties are. Further, the
magistrate was correct in holding that the emailed letter
attached to
the affidavit resisting summary judgment and on which the Appellant
relied on for a debatement of his account related
wholly to earlier
claims instituted against him by the Respondent.
15.
In the premises, the appeal is dismissed with costs on a party and
party
scale.
CAJEE
AJ
I
concur
MOSHOANA
J
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Appellant
Ms.
L. Mbanjwa
Instructed
By
L.
Mbanjwa Inc
Counsel
for the Respondent
Adv.
W Roos
Instructed
by
Linda
Erasmus Attorneys
Date
of Hearing
17
November 2022
Date
of Judgment
19
December 2022
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