Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 267South Africa
Bella Rosa Three Home Owners Association v Brandt and Others (A39/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 267 (6 September 2024)
Headnotes
that, although the appellant was entitled to levy the building penalties against the first respondent, no fair procedure had been followed. It was because of the unfair procedure, and specifically section 39 of the appellant’s Master Owners’ Association constitution (“the master constitution”), that he found that the penalties were invalid. The order granted by the adjudicator was that “the fines against [the first respondent] are invalid; and [the appellant] is
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Bella Rosa Three Home Owners Association v Brandt and Others (A39/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 267 (6 September 2024)
Bella Rosa Three Home Owners Association v Brandt and Others (A39/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 267 (6 September 2024)
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sino date 6 September 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
PROPERTY – Community schemes
–
CSOS –
Penalty for late building –
No construction undertaken by previous owner – Building
penalty imposed on new owner
– Not afforded opportunity to
remedy breach or to make submissions – Attempt to engage
with association was within
contemplation of constitution –
New owner might seek to extend prescribed timeframes –
Adjudicator ordered fines
to be removed – Review and appeal
dismissed – Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011, s
39(1)(c).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
Number: A39/2023
In
the matter between:
BELLA
ROSA THREE
Appellant
HOME
OWNERS ASSOCIATION
(Registration
Number: 1951/000009/06)
and
ANNEKE
BRANDT
First Respondent
(Identity
Number: 6[…])
THE
COMMUNITY SCHEMES
OMBUD
SERVICE
Second Respondent
MNINAWA
BANGILIZWE
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ELECTRONICALLY ON 06 SEPTEMBER 2024
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD,
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The appellant seeks review and an appeal against
the decision of the third respondent in his capacity as an
adjudicator appointed
by the second respondent (“
the
CSOS”
). Although the matter was
not opposed, after hearing argument on behalf of the appellant the
Court issued Directives inviting the
CSOS to deliver an explanatory
affidavit in respect of certain questions, and to attend the
postponed proceedings, which was complied
with. After the hearing,
both the appellant and the CSOS were permitted to submit further
written submissions, for which we are
grateful.
[2]
The appellant is a homeowners’ association
which is a community scheme as defined in the Community Schemes Ombud
Service Act
9 of 2011 (“
the Act”
).
On 20 September 2021 the first respondent became owner of erf 3[...],
Unit 1[...] situated in Bella Rosa Bellville, Western Cape,
and
accordingly became a member of the community scheme. At the time, the
property was vacant, with no construction ever having
been undertaken
by the previous owner. From October 2021 the appellant imposed a
building penalty against the account of the first
respondent, on the
basis that no building construction had commenced on the property
within the period prescribed in the appellant’s
constitution.
[3]
It is not disputed that the first respondent did
not receive the monthly statements until 13 December 2021, apparently
due to an
email address error, by which time three months’
worth of building penalties were reflected in her monthly statement,
together
with interest. Almost immediately, she addressed emails to
the appellant challenging the imposition of the building penalty. The
parties were not able to resolve the issue, and on 31 May 2022 the
first respondent referred a complaint to the CSOS by completing
the
prescribed dispute resolution form.
[4]
The relief sought by the first respondent was that
“
the unreasonable and therefore
incorrect imposed fines/penalties be rescinded”.
The
complaint was accepted by the CSOS in terms of section 38(1) of the
Act. The appellant was granted an opportunity to deliver
written
submissions in response to the complaint in terms of section 43,
which were delivered on 21 November 2022 and set out its
basis for
charging the building penalties, based on section 10(b) and (c) of
its constitution, the contents of which I deal with
below. The first
respondent submitted a reply on 28 November 2022, and on 16 January
2023 the appellant submitted final written
submissions. The matter
was referred to conciliation in terms of section 47 but remained
unresolved, and a certificate of non-resolution
and referral to
adjudication was issued on 14 December 2022, in terms of section 48.
[5]
The adjudicator defined the dispute as an
application which sought relief in terms of section 39(1)(c) of the
Act.
He held that, although the appellant
was entitled to levy the building penalties against the first
respondent, no fair procedure
had been followed. It was because of
the unfair procedure, and specifically section 39 of the appellant’s
Master Owners’
Association constitution (“
the
master constitution”
), that he
found that the penalties were invalid. The order granted by the
adjudicator was that “
the fines
against [the first respondent] are invalid; and [the appellant] is
ordered to remove the fines from the [first respondent’s]
levy
statement, within 14 days of this order”
.
B.
THE REVIEW
[6]
Although
the appellant adopted the double-barrelled approach endorsed in
Kingshaven
Homeowners’
Association v Botha
[1]
in
terms of which a party in its circumstances may bring both an appeal
and a review, it argued that the review ground deserved
consideration
first because, if successful, it would obviate the need to determine
the appeal. The review is based on
section
6(2)(a)(i) of the
Promotion
of Administration of Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“
PAJA”
)
,
and it is argued that the adjudicator was not authorised by the Act
to make the decision that he did.
[7]
The appellant relies on two grounds in this
regard, and both were not raised at the CSOS proceedings, with the
latest one only being
raised after the hearing of the matter in this
Court. Both grounds seek to challenge the jurisdiction of the CSOS
and the adjudicator
to determine the matter. The first belated
challenge to jurisdiction was the main reason that this Court invited
the CSOS to participate
in these proceedings because in terms of
section 42(1) of the Act, it is the body that performs the sifting
function of rejecting
an application if the relief sought is not
within its jurisdiction.
[8]
Although
the issues raised by the appellant are questions of law which could
ordinarily be the subject of an appeal in terms of
section 57 of the
Act, the fact that they were not raised previously raises questions
of fairness, in particular, towards the first
respondent who did not
participate in these proceedings. As a result, the Court is mindful
of the caution sounded by the Constitutional
Court in
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2]
,
where the following was stated:
“
The
mere fact that a point of law is raised for the first time on appeal
is not in itself sufficient reason for refusing to consider
it. If
the point is covered by the pleadings, and if its consideration
on appeal involves no unfairness to the other party
against whom it
is directed, this Court may in the exercise of its discretion
consider the point. Unfairness may arise where, for
example, a party
would not have agreed on material facts, or on only those facts
stated in the agreed statement of facts had the
party been aware that
there were other legal issues involved. It would similarly be unfair
to the other party if the law point
and all its ramifications were
not canvassed and investigated at trial.”
[3]
[9]
A
similar statement was recently made by the Constitutional Court in
Regenesys
Management (Pty) Ltd t/a Regenesys v Ilunga
[4]
,
where
it was stated that
a
court may raise a point of law
mero
motu
if
the point does not need any new evidence to be led and if it would
not be unfair to one or both parties for the court to consider
and
take into account that point of law. The parties agree that these
principles find application to these proceedings even though
they
were made in slightly different contexts. I agree.
[10]
With this background in mind, I now consider the
grounds of review. The first ground, as set out in the founding
affidavit, is that
the first respondent’s application to the
CSOS fell within the ambit of section 41(1) of the Act, which
provides that “
an application for
an order declaring any decision of an association or an executive
committee to be void may not be made later
than 60 days after such a
decision has been taken”
. The
appellant states that its decision to levy the building penalties was
made in September 2021, and the first respondent’s
application
was only submitted to the CSOS on 31 May 2022, more than 60 days had
elapsed, and accordingly it was out of time. The
argument continues
that, since no condonation application was made in terms of section
41(2) for the ombud to condone the late
submission of the first
respondent’s application, the adjudicator did not have the
jurisdiction to determine the complaint
and acted
ultra
vires
when he did so.
[11]
The
first issue arising is whether the first respondent’s complaint
is one in which she sought a declaratory order that a
decision of the
appellant or its executive committee was ‘void’. Although
the terms are not defined in the Act, it
nevertheless draws a
distinction between void and invalid decisions. That is apparent when
one has regard to the provisions of
subsections 39(4)(b), 39(4)(c)
and 39(4)(e)
[5]
in which
decisions may be declared as either void or invalid. Two instances of
void decisions are mentioned, and that is in
sections
39(4)(c)
(i)
and
39(4)(e). In terms of the former, an applicant may seek an order
declaring that a resolution purportedly passed at a meeting
of the
executive committee, or at a general meeting of the association was
void. In terms of section 39(4)(e) an applicant may
seek an order
declaring that a particular resolution passed at a meeting is void on
the ground that it unreasonably interferes
with the rights of an
individual owner or occupier or the rights of a group of owners or
occupiers.
[12]
The
first respondent sought neither of the two forms of relief. What she
sought was an order that “
the
unreasonable and therefore incorrect imposed fines/penalties be
rescinded”.
She did not seek an
order setting aside the contents of a resolution reached at a
meeting. She could not have made such a request,
because she was
referred to no contents of a meeting or resolution as a basis for
imposing the penalties against her.
[13]
Properly understood, her complaint was that the
penalties were imposed unfairly and unreasonably upon her. In the
correspondence
attached to her complaint, she made clear that she
understood the rationale for the rules relating to the building
timeframes having
previously lived in a community scheme. It is
therefore difficult to conclude that the first respondent sought an
order declaring
that a decision was void, within the meaning of the
Act. Rather, what she sought was an order to the effect that the
imposition
of the fines was unfair and unreasonable and accordingly
invalid, as opposed to void. This is why it is understandable that
the
adjudicator held that the penalty fines against her were
‘invalid’.
[14]
Whilst section 41(1) imposes a time limit of 60
days for applicants seeking an order declaring a decision of an
association or an
executive committee to be void, there is no similar
time limitation in respect of invalid or unreasonable decisions. One
can understand
the rationale for creating a distinction in this
regard. Where a decision is possibly void, the need for legal
certainty is greater,
hence the time limit of 60 days. Here, the
appellant relies on provisions contained in a constitution which on
its face is dated
October 2011. At the very least, the content of the
specific provisions relied upon indicates that they were in place by
10 February
2010. Accordingly, by 31 May 2022 when the first
respondent referred her dispute to the CSOS there could have been no
concerns
about the legal certainty of the provisions of the
constitution, and there would have been no reason for the express
time bar in
section 41(1). I am accordingly unable to agree that the
first respondent sought an order in terms of section 41(1).
[15]
To make matters worse, the appellant’s
challenge based on section 41(1) and (2) is accompanied by a
complaint in the founding
papers that its decision was “
made
in September 2021”
, and came to
the first respondent’s attention “
as
early as October 2021”
. There is
no support in the record for a decision made by it in September 2021.
No such decision was referred to, even in its heads
of argument.
[16]
There is also no evidence that such a decision
came to the attention of the first respondent as early as October
2021. That averment
is refuted by the appellant’s own version
at the CSOS, where it clarified in its submissions dated 21 November
2022 that
due to a “
bona fide
error” the first respondent’s account
statements for the months of October and November 2021 had been sent
to the incorrect
e-mail address. This was confirmed by the
correspondence attached in the CSOS proceedings in which the first
respondent complained
that she only became aware of the accounts on
13 December 2021 after they had been addressed to the incorrect
email address.
As a result, there was no dispute before the
adjudicator that the first time that the first respondent became
aware of the accounts
was in December 2021.
[17]
It is correct that there is no evidence of a
condonation application having been made by the first respondent,
given that the complaint
was only referred on 31 May 2022. While it
is not for this court to determine any such condonation application
given the narrow
ambit of powers it is accorded in terms of the Act,
there are some significant considerations which warrant
consideration.
[18]
The application to the CSOS was made with
reference to the correspondence between the first respondent and the
appellant, all of
which was attached to the dispute referral. It is
evident from that correspondence that the first respondent disputed
the penalty
immediately upon discovering it and conveyed that she
would seek advice on the matter. She sent another e-mail on 8 March
2022,
setting out the essence of her complaint to the appellant. In
the email of 8 March 2022, she stated that since she had just bought
the property and was awaiting approval of building plans and rights,
it was physically impossible to expect her to start building
immediately upon registration of the property into her name. In light
thereof, she argued that it would have been reasonable to
have been
awarded the same time periods as the previous property owners before
penalties could be charged. Furthermore, she argued
that she could
not be held liable for the previous owner’s failure to build
within the prescribed time period. There was
no response from the
appellant until 12 May 2022. The dispute was referred just under 3
weeks later.
[19]
The contents of the e-mail of 8 March 2022
indicate that the first respondent was seeking to persuade the
appellant to rescind the
imposition of a penalty against her by
considering the arguments she raised. It is not unreasonable to infer
that, after the e-mail
of 8 March 2022 she was awaiting the outcome
of her request for the appellant to set aside the penalty. That is
not an unreasonable
inference given that, up until the correspondence
of 12 May 2022, there is no evidence that the appellant had provided
the first
respondent with any explanation for the building penalties,
or responded to her queries relating to the reasonableness of the
timing
thereof. That is particularly significant given that the very
constitutional provisions - clauses 10(b) and (c) - that the
appellant
relies upon provide for possible agreement for extension of
the building timeframes between the parties. It provides, amongst
other
things, that t
he purchaser or its successor in title may
negotiate with the appellant for an extended period for the
completion of the construction
on the property.
Her
conduct of awaiting a response fell within the ambit of that clause.
[20]
The first explanation for the penalties from the
appellant appeared in the communication of 12 May 2022, in which the
appellant
set out the contents of subsections 10(b) to (d) of its
constitution. Thereafter, the appellant stated as follows: “
Based
on the above extract from the constitution, even though you are a new
owner you are bound to the penalty until completion
of your house.
This is something that the sellers of the property should have
disclosed to you.
Therefore we
unfortunately cannot reverse the penalty on your account or provide
you with any form of relief
.”
The highlighted portion makes clear that the
appellant understood that the first respondent was prevailing upon it
to reverse the
penalty or to provide some form of relief. This
understanding was confirmed by the first respondent’s response
of 23 May
2022 in which she firstly complained that the appellant had
taken two and a half months to reply. Then she stated as follows:
“
Despite our serious concerns and
objections, which you seem to completely ignore and fail to address,
we now know your position and
decision
. We will make use of
our option to raise this issue with the CSOS”
.
[21]
It is therefore clear from the correspondence that
in both parties’ minds at the time, the first respondent sought
to change
the appellant’s mind regarding the imposition of the
penalties, and a decision in that regard was only conveyed to her on
12 May 2022, albeit unsatisfactory to the first respondent. In my
view, that is the decision that would be the subject of an
application
in terms of section 41(1), if that provision were held to
be applicable to this matter, especially if one has regard to the
provisions
of the constitution already referred to which contemplate
possible engagement between the parties.
[22]
All of this was before the adjudicator, and was
known to the appellant, which explains why it did not complain about
the delay in
that forum. This is why I consider it unfair for the
appellant to now raise the issue in these proceedings, because the
facts were
so starkingly obvious between the parties that the issue
of delay never arose. Had the appellant raised it there the first
respondent
and the adjudicator would have had regard to the contents
of the correspondence outlined above, in arriving at the conclusion
that
there was no delay or that there was a good explanation for any
delay which might have ensued.
[23]
The appellant later expanded its grounds for
review, and this was after the appeal hearing, apparently pursuant to
an exchange with
the bench. I preface this part of the discussion by
stating that, even though the CSOS was permitted to deliver written
submissions
in reply, the first respondent, who did not participate
in the proceedings, did not obtain such an opportunity and did not
receive
notice of the new argument. Neither was the argument raised
at the CSOS proceedings, similar to the earlier jurisdiction point
already discussed.
[24]
The appellant’s new argument is that the
relief sought by the first respondent is not catered for by the Act
because it (the
Act) does not provide relief relating to a
contractual penalty, which was the subject of the dispute.
Furthermore, the relief granted
by the adjudicator does not fall
within any of the relief available in terms of section 39(1)(c)
because the first respondent was
not seeking the setting aside of a
‘contribution’ which is the subject-matter of subsection
(c). Accordingly, the adjudicator
lacked the jurisdiction to
determine the dispute, and the only relief available to the first
respondent was to approach the High
Court.
[25]
The adjudicator gave no reasons for characterizing
the dispute as one falling within the forms of relief available in
terms of section
39(1)(c). Since the appellant did not raise the
issue before the CSOS, neither of the parties paid any attention to
it in their
written or oral submissions. And the CSOS did not reject
the application in terms of section 42, as it was entitled to do, on
the
basis that it lacked jurisdiction to determine the dispute, or
that the dispute should rather have been dealt with in a court of
law. In other words, all the parties, including the appellant
accepted that the CSOS and the adjudicator had jurisdiction to
determine
the matter.
[26]
The issue requires
interpretation of the provisions of the Act, taking into account the
well-known interpretative principles espoused
in
Endumeni
[6]
and
Capitec
[7]
.
The stated purpose of the Act includes the need “
to
provide for a dispute resolution mechanism in community schemes”
.
A ‘dispute’ is defined as “
a
dispute in regard to the administration of a community scheme between
persons who have a material interest in that scheme, of
which one of
the parties is the association, occupier or owner, acting
individually or jointly”
.
There
is no dispute that the matter between the parties in this matter
meets the requirements of this definition.
[27]
In terms of section 38, read with section 39, any
person to make an application if such a person is a party to or is
affected materially
by a dispute, provided that the application must
set out relief that is within the scope of one or more of the prayers
for relief
contemplated in section 39 and must include one or more of
the orders set out in section 39. Section 39(1)(c) provides as
follows:
“
An
application made in terms of section 38 must include one or more of
the following orders… in respect of financial issues
-
…
(c)
an order declaring that a
contribution
levied on owners or
occupiers, or the way it is to be paid, is incorrectly determined or
unreasonable, and an order for the adjustment
of the contribution to
a correct or reasonable amount or an order for its payment in a
different way…” (my emphasis)
[28]
The
appellant argues that the dispute did not involve a contribution but
a penalty. In this regard it refers to the definition of
‘contribution’ which is contained in section 3(1) of the
Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011
[8]
.
The Act defines neither term, and creates no distinction when
defining the bounds of jurisdiction. It also does not oust the
jurisdiction of the CSOS relating to penalty disputes. And as I have
already indicated, it defines a dispute in wide terms, which
implies
that penalties are included in its ambit. The same may be observed
regarding the term ‘financial issues’ employed
in the
opening sentence of section 39(1). It is similarly not defined and is
cast in wide terms. It has not been suggested that
the first
respondent’s dispute does not involve financial issues. The
first respondent queried amounts levied on her as being
incorrectly
and unfairly determined and unreasonable, and what she sought as
relief was rescission of what she termed “
unreasonable
and incorrect imposed fines/penalties”.
[29]
Nor
does the Act exclude disputes relating to contractual disputes,
whether expressly or impliedly. As the CSOS correctly observes
in its
written submissions, such an exclusion would undermine its mandate
and would severely limit the options available to parties,
and would
force them to approach the High Court whose proceedings can be
prohibitively expensive. Such an approach would be contrary
to the
stated objectives of the Act, which include the promotion of quick
and affordable access to justice through a relatively
cheap and
informal dispute resolution mechanism.
[9]
[30]
There
furthermore does not appear to be a rational basis for distinguishing
between contributions and penalties if one has regard
to the fact
that, in either event, one is dealing with a contractual issue. The
case law confirms that an instrument such as a
constitution between a
homeowners’ association and its members constitutes a contract
between them.
[10]
The
relationship
between
them is contractual in nature.
If
penalties were excluded from the jurisdiction of the CSOS because
they are contractual in nature, that would apply to all disputes
affected by what is described in the Act as ‘scheme governance
documentation’.
[31]
Most
significantly, our courts have endorsed the adjudication of disputes
relating to building penalties by adjudicators acting
under the
auspices of the CSOS. One such matter is
Chapman's
Bay Estate Homeowners'
Association v Lotter
[11]
which
was decided in this Division. The matter turned on the interpretation
of a building penalty clause contained in the constitution
of a
homeowners’ association. In terms of the relevant provision in
that constitution,
a
building penalty was imposed because the previous owner had failed to
develop the property within the time stipulated in the constitution
of the homeowners’ association, which, in that case was a
period of three years after transfer.
[32]
The court held that the
responsibility
to construct a dwelling within three years after transfer is a
personal obligation undertaken on the basis of the
contractual nature
of the constitution. However, based on the interpretation of the
specific clause, the court held that the
obligation in that case
could not be transferred to new owners.
[12]
Significantly, the relief granted by the court was a substitution
order, because the court was of the view that it was “
entitled
to grant an order which the adjudicator would have been entitled to
grant under section 54 of the Act, mutatis mutandis”
[13]
.
It
was on that basis that the homeowners’ association in that case
was ordered to desist from imposing penalty levies in terms
of clause
9.10 of its constitution upon any owners in the Estate other than
those who took transfer of their properties from the
developer.
Thus,
the court confirmed the power of an adjudicator to determine a
dispute relating to building penalties.
[33]
Another
relevant matter is the recent case of
Stone
River Management Association NPA v Mashoko and Others
[14]
in which a homeowners’
association sought, amongst other forms of relief, the payment of
unpaid building penalties.
[15]
Similar to this matter, t
he
penalty levies were imposed due to failure to complete building
operations within the period specified in the memorandum of
incorporation (“MOI”) of the homeowners’
association. The adjudicator granted an order for the payment of
the
arrear levies and interest but ordered the appellant to remove the
building penalty from the first respondent’s levy
statement,
within fourteen (14) days upon receipt of the order.
[34]
After
interpreting the provisions of the MOI, the court held
[16]
that the first respondent was contractually bound to its terms, which
provided for the building penalty, and that the adjudicator
had
failed to give effect to the terms thereof. Importantly, the court
referred the dispute
relating
to the building penalty back to the adjudicator
[17]
,
because the adjudicator had failed to consider the defence raised by
the first respondent regarding why he failed to comply with
the
period prescribed in the MOI for commencing building works
.
[35]
Thus,
the court in that matter
confirmed
the power of an adjudicator to determine a dispute relating to a
building
penalty.
Although it did not specify the provisions of the Act in terms of
which an adjudicator is entitled to adjudicate such a
matter it did
refer to the following in its discussion: section 2 which provides
that
the
purpose of the Act is to provide for a dispute resolution mechanism
in community schemes;
section
39 which sets out the relief that can be sought from the adjudicator;
section 39(1)(e) which relates to financial issues
and provides for
an order for the payment or re-payment of a contribution or any other
amount; and section 50
which
sets out the adjudicator’s duties during the investigation.
[18]
[36]
The case law is accordingly against the latest
argument raised by the appellant on this issue. In my view, the
review must be dismissed,
based on all the considerations discussed
in this section.
C.
THE APPEAL
[37]
Section 57(1) of the Act
provides for a statutory right to appeal as follows: “
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.”
Thus
the provision allows for the setting aside of a decision on the
narrow ground that it was founded on an error of law.
[19]
It is akin to the third type of appeal identified in
Tikly
v Johannes
[20]
which amounts to “
a
review, that is, a limited rehearing with or without additional
evidence or information to determine, not whether the decision
under
appeal was correct or not, but whether the arbiters had exercised
their powers and discretion honestly and properly.”
[21]
[38]
The ground of appeal as contained in the founding
affidavit is that the adjudicator failed to have regard to the fact
that the appellant’s
constitution, and specifically clause
10(b) and (c) thereof, is a contract between the appellant and the
first respondent in terms
of which the latter agreed to be bound. And
by focusing on the procedure followed by the appellant, the
adjudicator effectively
amended the constitution, instead of simply
applying its provisions. The second basis for appeal is that the
adjudicator erroneously
referred to the appellant’s Conduct
Rule 23 and section 39 of its master constitution, and also
incorrectly interpreted that
rule when he found that the appellant
was required to issue a notice before imposing the building
penalties.
[39]
The relevant clauses of the appellant’s constitution,
subclauses
10(b) and (c), provide as follows:
“
(b)
The following condition is applicable to all the owners of single
title erven and will also bind
their successors in title, namely:
Should the construction
of the buildings to be erected on the within mentioned property not
be commenced with within a period of
18 months from date of original
sale of the property from the Developer, Bella Rosa Development (Pty)
Ltd, to the first buyer thereof,
and completed within 30 months from
date of original sale of the property from the Developer, Bella Rosa
Development (Pty) Ltd,
to the first buyer thereof (or such extended
period as may be agreed upon by the Purchaser or its successor in
title and the Bella
Rosa Three Homeowners Association) the Bella Rosa
Three Homeowners Association will be entitled to levy a penalty equal
to 10%
of the original purchase price of the Property, which penalty
shall be payable after 30 months from date of sale as aforesaid and
thereafter every year until the buildings are completed to the
satisfaction of the Local Authority and the Bella Rosa Three
Homeowners
Association. All buildings on the Property shall be
constructed in accordance to the architectural design guidelines as
laid down
by the Bella Rosa Three Homeowners Association.
(c)
From the 10th of February 2010, the penalty specified in clause (b)
shall be reduced
to twice (2 times) the monthly levy payable monthly
in advance on or before the 1st day of each month, until the
buildings are
completed to the satisfaction of the Local Authority
and the Master Owners’ Association. The penalty shall be
payable in
addition to the ordinary monthly levy pay-able by the
Owner of the Erf. All buildings on the Erf shall be constructed in
accordance
to the Design Guidelines of the Master Owners’
Association.”
[40]
There was no dispute about the interpretation of
the above provisions between the parties. From their plain wording,
the
clauses bind all owners of single title erven as well as
their successors in title. A construction upon property is required
to
commence within 18 months of the date of the original sale of the
property from the Developer to the first buyer, and must be completed
within 30 months of the original sale of the property from the
Developer to the first buyer. The purchaser or its successor in
title
may negotiate with the appellant for an extended period for the
completion of the construction on the property. The applicable
penalty levy is equal to 10% of the original purchase price of the
property, and is payable after 30 months from date of sale,
and
thereafter every year until the building work is completed to the
satisfaction of the Local Authority and appellant. Furthermore,
with
effect 10 February 2010, the penalty levy is calculated at twice the
monthly levy payable, monthly in advance on the first
day of each
month, until the building construction is completed to the
satisfaction of the Local Authority and the Master Owners’
Association. The penalty is payable in addition to the ordinary
monthly levy payable by the owner of the erf.
[41]
As I
have already mentioned, the adjudicator accepted that the first
respondent was bound by these provisions.
[22]
In that regard, he specifically mentioned the case of
Mount
Edgecombe Country Club Estate Management Association II (RF) NPC v
Singh and Others
[23]
- also
relied upon by the appellant in these proceedings - in which it was
held
[24]
that when home-owners
purchase property and become members of a homeowners’
association, they agree to be bound by its rules
and the relationship
between them is contractual in nature. Accordingly, I cannot find
that the adjudicator failed to have regard
to the contractual nature
of the relationship between the parties, or to the contractual
implications of the appellant’s
constitution.
[42]
The adjudicator also held that the appellant
failed to follow a fair procedure before imposing the penalties
against the first respondent
because it failed to issue a notice in
writing and to afford the first respondent an opportunity to remedy
the breach or to make
submissions in writing if she disputed the
breach.
In this respect the appellant argues that that the
adjudicator erred by not stopping his inquiry once he made a finding
that the
first respondent is bound by the constitutional provisions.
[43]
Such an approach, however, would be contrary to the appellant’s
constitutional provisions. In terms of clause 10(b), the prescribed
period for commencement and completion of the building works
is
subject to “
such extended period as may be agreed upon by
the Purchaser or its successor in title and the [appellant]”.
This provision
contemplates that an agreement
might be reached between the parties regarding the possible extension
of the prescribed periods for
building works. It is not difficult to
understand why a successor in title might seek to extend the
prescribed timeframes, because
they would only obtain transfer of the
property after sale from the original buyer. By then, time would be
working against them,
and the timeframes would need to be adjusted,
especially where no building work has commenced, as was the case
here. Thus, the
premium of engaging with the homeowners’
association in those circumstances with a view to reaching agreement
regarding adjusted
timeframes is high. This the constitution
recognized by including a provision allowing for possible agreement
to extend the timeframes.
[44]
The need for such a clause is demonstrated by the
facts of this case, because the first respondent pointed to
impossibility of performance
within the prescribed times. In her
email of 8 March 2022, she stated as follows:
“…
we
had just bought the land, so there is no way physically possible that
we could have had plans passed and… the property
instantaneously. Since we can(sic)not be expected to perform inhuman
feats, your company will be hard pressed proving the legality
of your
demand.”
[45]
In her submissions dated 28 November 2022, she set
out the practical difficulties she experienced in obtaining building
approval
which were due, in part, to covid-19. It is relevant in this
regard that the computation of the timeframe prescribed for the
commencement
and completion of building works involves the tenure of
the old owner as well as that of the first respondent. Even if the
penalties
themselves are not inherited or accrued from the previous
owner, the computation of the prescribed period involves both
tenures.
Commencement is calculated from 18 months of the
original
sale, and completion must be within 30 months of the original sale.
And yet, c
ontrary to what was argued before us,
the constitutional provisions place a
personal
contractual obligation upon the first respondent because effectively
the non-compliance of the previous owner, whether
in part or in full,
is attributed to her as a breach of the constitutional obligations.
[46]
That being so, it is self-evident that the first
respondent as the new owner would, at the very least, have had to be
afforded an
opportunity to remedy the alleged breach. It is common
cause that this was not done. Instead, when the first respondent
received
the first statement, it was backdated by three months’
worth of building penalties, plus interest. This, in circumstances
where the very constitutional provision upon which the appellant
relies contemplates that an agreement might be reached between
the
parties regarding the possible extension of the prescribed periods
for building works, as contemplated in clause 10(b).
[47]
The correspondence already referred to clearly
indicates that the first respondent attempted to engage the appellant
in this regard.
Specifically, the first respondent referred to the
timing of imposing the penalties, stating
as follows:
“
We have no
issue with the rule per se and understand the importance of this rule
and
we will be abiding by a requirement to start building within a
reasonably prescribed. And to have finished the build before
the end
of the second year of our ownership of this ground.”
[48]
Later, she stated –
“
[The
appellant] has issued our fine/penalty included in the first
statement we ever received and even backdated it. There has never
been a meeting with us and [the appellant] in connection with this
unilaterally imposed fine. We have not been granted a reasonable
opportunity to make representations. This fine was imposed despite
not following correct procedures… The fine is in contravention
of our constitutional rights as we cannot be held liable for the
previous owner's failure to build within the prescribed period.
It
would however have been reasonable to have awarded us the same time
periods as the first owners were awarded and we would have
gladly
adhered to such a demand”
.
[49]
It is evident from these quoted portions that the
first respondent’s conduct of seeking to engage the appellant
was within
the contemplation of the constitutional provision that
provides for agreement regarding possible extension of the
timeframes. The
provision contemplates submissions such as the ones
she made, for consideration by the appellant. How else would
agreement be reached
otherwise, within the contemplation of the
constitutional provisions?
[50]
Regrettably, the first respondent’s pleas
fell on deaf ears. The correspondence indicates that the appellant
was impervious
to the possibility of extending the timeframes, let
alone setting aside the penalties. It instead set out the contents of
clause
10, and informed her that the penalties could not be reversed
and that no other form of relief could be provided to her and she
was
advised to contact the CSOS if she wished for the penalties to be
reversed. This conduct by the appellant was unreasonable
and contrary
to the spirit of the constitutional provision in question.
[51]
It is no wonder that the
the adjudicator raised
the issue of procedural fairness. The appellant had effectively
determined a penalty for a breach of its
constitutional provisions,
without ever having afforded the first respondent an opportunity to
remedy it. In terms of the constitutional
provisions, she had a right
to make representations regarding possible extension of the
timeframes, and was not afforded such opportunity
by the appellant.
For example, it only came out during the CSOS proceedings that she
eventually obtained building approval on September
2022. Having
denied the appellant the opportunity to make such representations,
the question that arises is whether, and on what
basis, the appellant
was entitled to impose the penalties against the first respondent. On
application of the constitutional provision
in question, it had no
such right until it had at least engaged with the first respondent’s
concerns. Accordingly, I am inclined
to agree with the conclusion of
the adjudicator that building penalty was unreasonably and unfairly
imposed and was as a result
invalid.
[52]
It is
true that the adjudicator incorrectly applied the provisions of
section 39
[25]
of the
appellant’s master constitution and conduct rule 23
[26]
.
Those provisions are not relevant to the interpretation of clause 10
because they
concern
behavioural issues, not building penalties. Thus the adjudicator made
an error when he held that the appellant was required
to follow the
procedure in terms of conduct rule 23 as read with clause 39 of the
master constitution, before imposing the penalty
levy in terms of
clause 10 of the constitution. However, given that this Court has
reached the same conclusion as he did, I do
not consider the error to
be material.
[53]
Since the matter was not opposed, the appellant
did not seek a costs order. However, as I have indicated, the court
invited the
CSOS to participate in these proceedings primarily
because of the jurisdiction points argued by the appellant, which
required explanation
by the CSOS. Then, after the appellant’s
request to submit further written submissions after the hearing, the
CSOS also requested
an opportunity to reply thereto. Although the
Court is grateful for the reply, it is not sufficient grounds in my
view to award
a cost order in their favour.
D.
ORDER
[54]
For all the above reasons, the review and the appeal are dismissed,
with no order as to costs.
N.
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD
Judge
of the High Court
I
agree, and it is so ordered.
V.
SALDANHA
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
For
the appellant
:
Adv A Brink
Instructed
by
:
Bornman and Hayward Attorneys
R
Mortz
For
the respondents
:
Adv T Mpahlwa
Instructed
by
:
Mapongwana Attorneys Inc.
S
Mchunu
[1]
Kingshaven
Homeowners’ Association v Botha and others
[2020]
ZAWCHC 92
(4 September 2020) para [25]. See also
Manor
Body Corporate v Pillay and Others
[2020]
ZAGPJHC 190 (6 March 2020).
[2]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007]
ZACC 5
;
2007
(5) SA 323
(CC)
(4
April 2007). Footnotes omitted. See also
Naude
and Another v Fraser
[1998]
ZASCA 56
;
1998
(4) SA 539
at 558 B-C.
[3]
See
also
Naude
and Another v Fraser
[1998]
ZASCA 56
;
1998
(4) SA 539
at 558 B-C.
[4]
Regenesys Management
(Pty) Ltd t/a Regenesys v Ilunga and Others
(CCT
220/22)
[2024] ZACC 8
;
2024 (7) BCLR 901
(CC);
[2024] 8 BLLR 777
(CC); (2024) 45 ILJ 1723 (CC) (21 May 2024) para 43.
[5]
The relevant provisions in section 39(4) provide as follows:
“
In
respect of meetings –
…
(b)
an order declaring that a purported meeting of the executive
committee, or a purported
general meeting of the association, was
not validly convened;
(c)
an order declaring that a resolution purportedly passed at a meeting
of the executive
committee, or at a general meeting of the
association
(i)
was void; or
(ii)
is invalid;
…
(e)
an order declaring that a particular resolution passed at a meeting
is void on the
ground that it unreasonably interferes with the
rights of an individual owner or occupier or the rights of a group
of owners
or occupiers.”
[6]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA).
[7]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and others
2022
(1) SA 100 (SCA).
[8]
A
‘contribution’ was previously defined and levied in
terms of the now repealed
Sectional Titles Act 1986
.
[9]
See
Coral
Island Body Corporate v Hoge
2019
(5) SA 158 (WCC).
[10]
Mount
Edgecombe Country Club Estate Management Association II RF NPC v
Singh and others
2019
(4) SA 471
(SCA)
at para [19].
[11]
Chapman's
Bay Estate Homeowners' Association v Lotter and Others
(9387/2022)
[2023] ZAWCHC 35
(24 February 2023).
[12]
See
paras 42 and 45.
[13]
See
para 58.
[14]
Stone
River Management Association NPA v Mashoko and Others
(A2023/035929)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 800 (23 August 2024).
[15]
See
para 3.
[16]
See
paras 24, 28-29 and 31.
[17]
At
para 37.3.
[18]
See
para 32.
[19]
See
Trustees
for the Time Being of the Avenues Body Corporate v Shmaryahu and
Another
2018
(4) SA 566
(WCC) para 25.
[20]
Tikly v Johannes
1963 (2) SA 588
(T) at
paras 590 - 591.
[21]
See
Trustees
for the Time Being of the Avenues Body Corporate v Shmaryahu and
Another para 25;
Chapman's
Bay Estate Homeowners' Association v Lotter and Others
(9387/2022)
[2023] ZAWCHC 35
(24 February 2023) paras 8 -12.
[22]
See
paragraphs 6.19, 6.20, 6.22, 6.27 of the adjudication order.
[23]
Mount Edgecombe
Country Club Estate Management Association II (RF) NPC v Singh and
Others
(323/2018)
[2019] ZASCA 30
;
2019 (4) SA 471
(SCA) (28 March 2019)
[24]
See
para 19.
[25]
Section 39
of the master provision provides as follows:
“
(a)
If the conduct of a Member or Occupier or his family members,
guests, visitors, clients, employees, workers or contractors
constitute a nuisance in the opinion of the Trustees or the
Subcommittee as may be appointed by the Trustees, or a breach of
the
Conduct Rules, the Trustees or the Sub-committee, may:
(i)
informally (in person, or via telephone call, e-mail, or postal
mail) notify the Member and Occupier (if applicable) of the
nuisance
or contravention, and request the Member and Occupier (if
applicable) to offer a clear resolution of the issue, or
(ii)
by written notice inform the Member and Occupier (if applicable) of
the nuisance or contravention and warn the Member of
Occupier (if
applicable) that if he fails to remedy the contravention and/or if
he persists in such conduct or contravention,
a penalty will be
imposed on the Member, or
(iii)
by written notice impose a penalty on the Member.”
[26]
Conduct
Rule
23 provides as follows:
“
If
the conduct of an owner or occupier or his family members, visitors,
guests, clients, employees, workers or contractors constitute
a
nuisance or a contravention of these rules, the Trustees may impose
a penalty on the owner in accordance with clause 39 of
the
Constitution.”
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