Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 35South Africa
Chapman's Bay Estate Homeowners' Association v Lotter and Others (9387/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 35 (24 February 2023)
Headnotes
as follows at para [25] (and with reference to Manor Body Corporate v Pillay and Others [2020] ZAGPJHC 190 (6 March 2020)]:
Judgment
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## Chapman's Bay Estate Homeowners' Association v Lotter and Others (9387/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 35 (24 February 2023)
Chapman's Bay Estate Homeowners' Association v Lotter and Others (9387/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 35 (24 February 2023)
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sino date 24 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
number: 9387/2022
In
the matter between:
CHAPMAN’S
BAY ESTATE HOMEOWNERS’
ASSOCIATION
Applicant
and
WILLEM
ADRIAAN
LÖTTER
First respondent
COMMUNITY
SCHEMES OMBUD SERVICE
Second respondent
MNINAWA
BANGILIZWE
Third respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 24 FEBRUARY 2023
VAN
ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
Khalil Gibran was of the view that “
between
what is said and not meant, and what is meant and not said, most of
love is lost
”. This case
admittedly has nothing to do with love, but what has been “meant
and not said” lies at the
core of the dispute.
2.
The matter involves an appeal, alternatively, an
application to review and set aside, paragraphs 1.4.1 and 7.1 of an
adjudication
order dated 5 May 2022 made by the third respondent as
adjudicator under the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011
(“the
Act”).
3.
The applicant is a body corporate established
under section 29(1) of the now-repealed Land Use Planning Ordinance
15 of 1985 for
the Chapman’s Bay Estate residential development
situated in Noordhoek.
The
applicant is a “community scheme” as defined in section 1
of the Act, namely “…
.
any scheme or arrangement in terms
of which there is shared use of and responsibility for parts of land
and buildings, including
but not limited to a sectional titles
development scheme, a share block company, a home or property owner's
association, however
constituted, established to administer a
property development, …
;
4.
The first respondent is a
homeowner in the Estate. He is thus automatically a member of
the applicant, and is bound by its
constitution (see
Mount
Edgecombe Country Club Estate Management Association II RF NPC v
Singh and others
2019 (4) SA 471
(SCA) at para [19]: “
When
the respondents chose to purchase property within the estate and
become members of the Association, they agreed to be bound
by its
rules. The relationship between the Association and the respondents
is thus contractual in nature.
”
).
5.
The Community Schemes Ombud
Service, which is a juristic person established in terms of section 3
of the Act, is cited as the second
respondent. The core functions of
the Service include, in terms of section 4 of the Act, the promotion
of good governance of community
schemes and the provisions of a
dispute resolution service under the auspices of the Act.
6.
The third respondent is the
adjudicator to whom an application had been made by the first
respondent in terms of section 38, read
with section 48, of Act, for
relief concerning its complaint about the payment of certain penalty
fees to which I shall refer in
detail below.
7.
The second and third
respondents took no part in the proceedings in this Court. I
therefore infer that they abide the judgment.
The first
respondent also did not oppose the application, but was present at
the hearing and, at the invitation of the Court, stated
his views.
8.
This Court’s jurisdiction to determine the
matter under the Act is confirmed by the provisions of section 57(1)
of the Act,
which provide for a statutory 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
”
.
9.
The application was, in the alternative, brought
as an application for the judicial review of the adjudicator’s
decision pursuant
to the provisions of section 6 of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”). This
practice
has been endorsed in this Division: in
Kingshaven
Homeowners’ Association v Botha and others
[2020] ZAWCHC 92
(4 September 2020) the Court held as follows at para
[25] (and with reference to
Manor
Body Corporate v Pillay and Others
[2020]
ZAGPJHC 190 (6 March 2020)]
:
“
The
notion that such cases will arise quite commonly is not far-fetched
because the right of appeal in terms of s 57 is not
exclusive of
the right of an aggrieved party also to impugn the adjudicator’s
decision on review grounds that might not involve
‘questions of
law’ within the meaning of that term in s 57.
A
party might be well advised in many cases to adopt a double-barrelled
approach because of the difficulty not infrequently encountered
in
defining whether or not a particular complaint entails only ‘a
question of law’ within the meaning of that term
in the
statute, which might itself be a matter in contention
.”
[Emphasis added.]
10.
A record of the proceedings before the third
respondent was delivered, as contemplated in Rule 53 of the Uniform
Rules of Court.
11.
The present matter is perhaps better dealt with
as a statutory appeal under section 57 of the Act rather than
strictly as an application
for judicial review under PAJA (although
the review references are not irrelevant). The reason for this
is that it appears
to me that the determination of the dispute turns
mainly on a question of interpretation, which is a question of law
(see
KPMG Chartered Accountants v Securefin
Ltd
2009 (4) SA 399
(SCA) at para [39]) as
stipulated in section 57 of the Act. In
Trustees
for the Time Being of the Avenues Body Corporate v Shmaryahu and
Another
2018
(4) SA 566
(WCC) the Court pointed out that:
“
[25] The
appeal is not one for which provision is made in terms of the rules
of court, and no procedure has been prescribed
for it in terms of the
Act or the regulations made thereunder. It is well recognised
that the word ‘appeal’ is
capable of carrying various and
quite differing connotations. One therefore has to look at the
language and context of the
statutory provision in terms of which a
right of appeal is bestowed in a given case to ascertain the
juridical character of the
remedy afforded thereby. An appeal
in terms of s 57 is not a ‘civil appeal’ within the
meaning of the
Superior
Courts Act
10 of 2013
.
What may be sought in terms of
s 57
is
an order from this court setting aside a decision by a statutory
functionary on the narrow ground that it was founded on an error
of
law.
The
relief available in terms of
s 57
is
closely analogous to that which might be sought on judicial review.
The appeal is accordingly one that is most comfortably
niched
within the third category of appeals identified in Tikly v
Johannes
1963 (2) SA 588
(T), at 590-591
.”
[Emphasis added.]
12.
The third category of appeals as identified in
Tikly v Johannes
is “
a
review, that is, a limited re-hearing 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
”
(at 590H-591A).
13.
I proceed to discuss the issues against this
background.
The
penalty levy clause in the applicant’s constitution
14.
Clause 9.10 of the applicant’s constitution
stipulates:
“
Penalty
levies as determined by the Trustees Committee are payable to the
Association if a dwelling on the property is not completed
within 3
(three) years from date of transfer of the property from the
Developer on the basis that construction of the dwelling
should
commence within 2 (two) years from date of transfer of the property
into the name of the Purchaser, and completed within
1 (one) year
from date of commencement of such construction process, which shall
be undertaken on a continuous basis, unless an
extended time period
is approved by the Design
Review
Committee
due
to the complexity
of
the dwelling.
”
15.
The amount of the penalty levy, which is imposed
in addition to any regular levies, doubles from the fifth year after
transfer of
the property from the developer.
16.
The applicant contends that clause 9.10 falls to
be interpretated as follows: The period within which
construction of a dwelling
is required to commence and be completed
in terms of the clause is calculated from the date of first transfer
of the property from
the Developer. It is not calculated from
the date on which a subsequent owner such as the first respondent
takes transfer.
It may accordingly transpire, as it did in the
present case, that a subsequent owner is held liable for the payment
of penalty
levies from the date of transfer if, at the time the
property
is acquired,
the time periods in clause 9.10 have already
expired and the construction of a dwelling on the property has not
yet commenced or
been completed.
17.
The purpose of a provision such as clause 9.10,
which is often to be found in the constitutions for residential
developments in
community schemes, is to serve as an incentive to
owners to start and complete building works as soon as possible.
Building works
inherently cause prejudice to the homeowners’
association and the owners of the Estate (whose interests the
homeowners’
association represents) as a result of the nuisance
(such as noise and dust) caused by such works, the security
risk it presents and the
potential
for
damage to
common
property (for example, because of
the
use
of
heavy vehicles). It also affects the
attractiveness and hence the market value of properties in the Estate
since prospective buyers
do not want to live next to or near a
building site for an indefinite period. The homeowners’
association and its members
thus have
an
interest
in
building
works
within the Estate being
completed within a reasonable time – in the
present matter, in the time stipulated in clause 9.10.
18.
The applicant submits that the purpose of clauses
such as clause 9.10 will be undermined if the period stipulated
therein commenced
afresh every time a property is transferred to a
new owner. In such a case, owners would be eager to on-sell
their properties
every time the date of the payment of penalty levies
drew near. This would defeat the objective of the clause,
namely
to encourage the completion of construction works in the
Estate as soon as possible.
19.
In the circumstances, it is for the purchaser of
a property that is subject to a penalty levy to negotiate a reduced
purchase price.
The
first respondent’s complaint
20.
The first respondent purchased a vacant property
in the Estate and took transfer on 29 January 2021. The
property had, originally,
first been transferred from the developer
of the Estate on 17 August 2017. Neither the first purchaser
nor any of the successive
purchasers (except for the first
respondent) commenced with construction on the property.
21.
It is common cause that the first respondent was
made aware by the applicant of the implications of clause 9.10 of the
constitution
(as interpreted and applied by the applicant) prior to
purchasing his property in the Estate. (The first respondent
mentioned,
at the hearing of the matter (admittedly not on affidavit)
that the seller refused to agree to a reduced purchase price.)
He acknowledged that he would be bound by the terms of the
constitution, by signing a copy thereof.
22.
It is further common cause that the first
respondent started with the development of his property shortly after
the transfer thereof
to him, and it has since been completed.
The first respondent was, nevertheless, charged penalty levies in the
amount of
R58 905,00 because the first owner of the property (having
taken transfer from the developer) had failed to develop the property
within three years of transfer.
23.
It is important to point out that the first
respondent was not required to pay any levies “inherited”
from the previous
owner of his property. Those levies had been
paid up. The levies required from the first respondent were
imposed afresh
on the basis of the applicant’s interpretation
of the provisions of clause 9.10.
24.
In any event, fourteen months after taking
transfer the first respondent made application to the second
respondent for, amongst
other relief, an order that the applicant
“
be
stopped from enforcing penalty levies on new owners who have made
every effort to develop their property expeditiously”.
25.
The crux of the first respondent’s
complaint was that subsequent owners should not be forced to pay
penalty levies under clause
9.10 of the constitution where such
subsequent owner is not to blame for the fact that the time period
stipulated in the clause
has not been complied with. The
principal issues in his complaint were:
25.1.
That clause 9.10 was unreasonable or
unenforceable in imposing penalty levies on owners of undeveloped
properties irrespective of
when such an owner acquired the property.
25.2.
Alternatively, that clause 9.10 should be
interpreted to mean that the relevant period to construct a dwelling
starts to run (or
recommences) from the date when a new owner takes
transfer of the property. In other words, each new owner should
be afforded
the full period stipulated in clause 9.10 to construct a
dwelling on the property before penalty levies are imposed.
26.
The applicant levies the following criticism
against the first respondent’s complaint:
26.1.
A provision in the constitution of a homeowners'
association which imposes penalties on an owner where building works
have not commenced
or have not been completed within a stipulated
period of time is not
per se
so
unreasonable or against public policy to be rendered unenforceable as
a
matter of law (with
reference to the principles stated in
Beadica
231 CC and others v Trustees, Oregon Trust and others
2020 (5) SA 247
(CC) at para [35], albeit in another context).
26.2.
I have no issue with these principles, or with
the purpose of penalty provisions like clause 9.10 in the context of
estates such
as the one in the present matter. One must,
however, be careful to have proper regard to the words in which these
types of
provisions are couched. They are not all identical,
and each case must therefore be determined on the basis of the
particular
provision in question. (A case in point is
Walker
and another v Cilantro Residential Estate Homeowners Association
[2016] ZAGPJHC 299 (9 November 2016), where the imposition of
penalties was upheld, but on the basis of penalty clauses reading
differently from clause 9.10.)
26.3.
The applicant argues that there are no
circumstances in this case that render its application unreasonable
or against public policy.
Again, the submission is correct as a
broad principle, but – as is clear from the discussion below –
the provision
should be scrutinised to see if it may in fact be
applied in the manner for which the applicant contends.
26.4.
Insofar
as
the
first
respondent contends that
,
on
a
proper
interpretation of clause 9.10, new owners are not liable for penalty
levies in circumstances where the three-year period
stipulated in
clause 9.10 had expired (in full or in part) before such new owner
acquired the relevant property, this
also
cannot be
sustained.
Clause 9.10 is clear and there is no
justification for the interpretation advanced by the first
respondent.
27.
On
5 May
2022 the
third respondent
issued his
adjudication
order. In
paragraphs 1.4.1
and
7.1
thereof, the
adjudicator
ordered
“
that
the contribution
levied
on new owners, in reference to inheriting penalty levies from
previous owners is unreasonable and [the applicant] is ordered,
with
immediate effect, to desist from transferring
penalty levies from previous owners to new
owners.”
28.
The proper interpretation of clause 9.10 is
clearly central to the determination of the parties’ dispute.
I turn to
that issue before addressing the third respondent’s
adjudication award.
The
proper interpretation of clause 9.10
29.
The oft-quoted dictum in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at para [18] represents the current state of the
South African law regarding the interpretation of documents:
“
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or
contract,
having regard to the context
provided by reading the particular provision or provisions in the
light of the document as a whole
and the circumstances attendant upon
its coming into existence
. Whatever
the nature of the document, consideration must be given to the
language used in the light of the
ordinary rules of grammar and syntax; the context in which the
provision appears; the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and
the material known to those responsible for its production
.
Where more than one meaning is possible each possibility must be
weighed in the light of all these factors. The process is objective,
not subjective.
A sensible meaning is
to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike
results or undermines the apparent purpose
of the document.
Judges must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation to
substitute what they regard as reasonable, sensible or businesslike
for the words actually used
.
”
[Emphasis added.]
30.
In
Capitec Bank Holdings
Limited and another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and
others
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA) the Court
elaborated as follows at paras [25] to [26]:
“
[25] …
It is
the language used, understood in the context in which
it is used, and having regard to the purpose of the provision that
constitutes
the unitary exercise of interpretation
. I
would only add that the triad of text, context and purpose should not
be used in a mechanical fashion.
It is the relationship
between the words used, the concepts expressed by those words and the
place of the contested provision within
the scheme of the agreement
(or instrument) as a whole that constitutes the enterprise by
recourse to which a coherent and salient
interpretation is
determined.
As Endumeni emphasised, citing
well-known cases, ‘[t]he inevitable point of departure is the
language of the provision
itself’.
[26] None of
this would require repetition but for the fact that the judgment of
the
high court failed to make
its point of departure the relevant provisions of the subscription
agreement
.
Endumeni is
not a charter for judicial constructs premised upon what a contract
should be taken to mean from a vantage point
that is not located in
the text of what the parties in fact agreed. Nor
does Endumeni licence judicial interpretation
that imports
meanings into a contract so as to make it a better contract
,
or one that is ethically preferable
.”
[Emphasis added.]
31.
The text – viewed in context –
therefore remains the starting point in the interpretation of a
contract. For ease
of reference, I quote clause 9.10 again:
“
Penalty
levies as determined by the Trustees Committee are payable to the
Association
if a dwelling on the
property is not completed within 3 (three) years from date of
transfer of the property from the Developer
on the basis that
construction of the
dwelling should commence within 2 (two) years from date of transfer
of the property into the name of the Purchaser
,
and completed within 1 (one) year from date of commencement of such
construction process, which shall be undertaken on a continuous
basis, unless an extended time period is approved by the Design
Review
Committee
due
to the complexity
of
the dwelling.
”
[Emphasis added.]
32.
What is immediately apparent from a plain reading
of the clause is that the three-year period within which a dwelling
is to be completed
is expressly linked to the date of transfer of the
property from the developer. Similarly, the obligation to
commence construction
within two years means that the construction
must start within two years from the date of transfer from the
developer. There
is no indication in the text of the clause
that, once the three-year period has lapsed, penalty levies will
continue to be imposed
notwithstanding the fact that the property has
been transferred to a subsequent owner.
33.
Subsequent owners do not take transfer from the
developer, and there is thus nothing in the clause that entitles the
applicant to
continue to impose penalty levies on them. Those
owners are, in any event, incapable ever of complying with the
obligation
placed on the first owner, namely to develop the property
within three years of the date of transfer from the developer, if
they
only took transfer of the property more that three years after
it was first transferred from the developer.
34.
What the applicant is effectively seeking is the
“reading-in” (a concept used in the interpretation of
legislation so
as to render it constitutionally compliant: see
National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian
Equality and others v Minister of Home Affairs
2000 (6) SA 1
(CC)) of words in the clause so as to make provision
for the imposition of levies on subsequent owners for as long as the
property
remains undeveloped, in other words, to serve the purpose
that the applicant had in mind in including clause 9.10 in the
constitution.
This approach ignores the express link in the
clause between transfer of the property from the developer and the
development of
the property thereafter. It is also
impermissible on the authority of
Endumeni
and
Capitec Bank
.
This Court may not make a contract for the parties.
35.
In any event, insofar as clause 9.10 involves the
imposition of penalties, it should be strictly interpretated (see
Auto Protection Insurance Co Ltd v
Hanmerstrudwick
1964 (1) SA 349
(A) at 354D).
36.
Clause 9.10 should not be viewed in isolation,
but must be considered in the context of the constitution as a
whole:
Government of the Republic of
South Africa v York Timbers Ltd (2)
[2001] 2
All SA 75
(SCA) at para [5]). In what follows, I refer to
relevant clauses which assist in the proper interpretation of clause
9.10.
37.
Clause 7.5 of the constitution provides that the
rights and obligations of a member shall not be transferable.
This appears
to be contradictory to the provisions of clause 9.10 as
interpretated by the applicant, although it could be argued, in
favour
of the applicant, that the obligation to pay penalty levies is
not transferred from one owner to the next, as the penalty levies
are
imposed afresh on each succeeding purchaser. The answer to that
argument, in my view, is that what is actually transferred
from the
first owner of the property (having taken transfer from the developer
as described in clause 9.10), to subsequent purchasers,
is the
obligation to have developed the property within three years after
transfer. Clause 7.5 and clause 9.10 are therefore
not
compatible should the applicant’s interpretation of the latter
be accepted.
38.
In terms of clause 7.8, a member “
shall
not be entitled to alienate or transfer a Residential Erf by means of
re-sale or to sell any interest in a juristic person
that owns such
Residential Erf, which sale effectively constitutes a transfer of the
property, unless it is a condition of the
alienation and transfer
that:-
…
7.8.3
he obtains a clearance certificate from the Association which shall
be given provided
…
7.8.3.4
all obligations of the Registered Owner in terms of the
Constitution
have been complied with in full.
”
39.
It appears that the applicant takes the view
that, given its own construction of clause 9.10, the provisions of
clause 7.8.3.4 need
not be complied with by the first owner of a
property. There is no evidence on record as to how clause
7.8.3.4 has been implemented
in relation to subsequent purchasers in
circumstances where the three-year building obligation has not been
fulfilled.
40.
Clause 9.7 is linked to clause 7.8. The
former provides that: “
Any amount due by
a Member by way of a levy shall be a debt due by him to the
Association, the obligation of a Member to pay the
levy shall cease
upon his ceasing to be a member of the Association, without prejudice
to the Association’s right to recover
arrear levies. No levies
paid by a Member shall under any circumstances be repayable by the
Association on his ceasing to be a
Member. A Member’s successor
in title to a Residential Erf shall be liable as from the date upon
which he becomes a Member
pursuant to the transfer of the Erf to pay
the levy attributable to that erf. No Member shall transfer his
Residential Erf until
the Association has certified that the Member
has at the date of transfer fulfilled or his financial obligations to
the Association
”.
41.
On the applicant’s interpretation of clause
9.10, the “
levy attributable to that
erf
” for which a new member would
become liable, would include a penalty levied as a result of the
non-development of the property.
The applicant argues that
penalty levies under clause 9.10 attach to the property in question,
and for that reason successive owners
are held liable for the payment
thereof.
42.
I do not agree. On a proper interpretation
of clause 9.10 it is the responsibility of the member who takes
transfer from the
developer to construct a dwelling within three
years after transfer. It is a personal obligation undertaken on
the basis
of the contractual nature of the constitution. It
does not attach to the property, but to the contracting member.
For
that reason, such obligation cannot be transferred to new
members, as is acknowledged by clause 7.5.
43.
The provisions of clause 9.10 would have no
business efficacy if the applicant’s contentions were upheld
(see
Government of the Republic of South
Africa v York Timbers Ltd (2) supra
at para
[15]). This is because, if the purpose is (on the plain wording
of the clause) to encourage owners to build within
three years of
taking transfer from the developer, that purpose can never be served
by imposing penalties on subsequent owners
where the three-year
period has expired. In such circumstances it is impossible for
subsequent owners to comply with the
clause. Imposing penalties
potentially in perpetuity from year 4 onwards does not give effect to
the purpose of the clause.
It simply provides an additional,
and probably substantial, source of income for the applicant –
one that is not necessarily
authorised by the provisions in the
constitution setting out the Trustee Committee’s rights and
duties in relation to the
levying of rates:
“
9.1
The members shall be jointly liable for
expenditure
incurred by the Association.
9.2
The Trustee Committee shall from time to time,
impose levies upon
the Members for the purpose of meeting all the expenses which the
Association has incurred, or which the Trustee
Committee reasonably
anticipate the Association will incur in respect of facilities and
services in connection with the Estate
and the payment of all
expenses necessarily or reasonably incurred in connection with the
management of the Association and its
affairs
.
9.3
In calculating levies the Trustee Committee shall take into account
income, if any, and
by the Association.
…
9.5
The Trustee Committee shall
estimate the amount which shall be
required by the Association to meet the expenses during each year,
together with such estimated
deficiency, if any, as shall result from
the preceding year,
and shall impose a levy upon the Members
equal to or as near as is reasonably practical to such estimated
amount. The Trustee Committee
may include in such levies an amount to
be held in reserve to meet anticipated future expenditure not of an
annual nature. …
9.6
The Trustee Committee, may from time to time, impose special levies
upon the Members
in respect of all such
expenses as are mentioned in clause 9.2
,
and such levies may be made in the sum or by such instalments and at
such time or times as the trustee committee shall think fit
.”
{Emphasis added.]
44.
The power to impose levies is primarily focused
on meeting the reasonably incurred expenses of the applicant.
The automatic
(and indiscriminate) imposition of penalty levies on
subsequent owners by reason of a first owner not having fulfilled its
obligation
under clause 9.10 to the applicant, falls outside of the
powers of the trustees in circumstances where clause 9.10 itself does
not provide such an entitlement.
45.
In summary, therefore, on a proper interpretation
of clause 9.10 as it stands, the applicant is entitled to impose
penalty levies
only upon owners who purchase properties in the Estate
directly from the developer. It is not entitled to charge
subsequent
owners with such levies. The clause does not say
what the applicant means for it to say. Redrafting is required.
46.
It follows from the discussion above that I do
not agree with the applicant’s interpretation of clause 9.10.
I also
not do agree with the interpretation placed on it by the first
respondent, namely that the three-year period should start afresh
every time a property is transferred to a subsequent owner.
There is, for the reasons already stated, no room for such an
interpretation on the wording of the clause.
47.
In coming to this conclusion, I take heed (as the
applicant’s counsel has urged the Court to do) of what is set
out in
Beadica supra
at para [80], namely that “
a
court may not refuse to enforce contractual terms on the basis that
the enforcement would, in its subjective view, be unfair,
unreasonable or unduly harsh. These abstract values have not
been accorded autonomous, self-standing status as contractual
requirements. Their application is mediated through the rules
of contract law; including the rule that a court may not enforce
contractual terms where the term or its enforcement would be contrary
to public policy. It is only where a contractual term, or
its
enforcement, is so unfair, unreasonable or unjust that it is contrary
to public policy that a court may refuse to enforce it
”
.
48.
In the present matter, however, the wording of
the clause does not bear out the wide interpretation given to it by
the applicant
in support of the purpose for which it has been
included in the constitution. Whether the clause is unfair,
unreasonable
or harsh does not enter the debate.
The
third respondent’s adjudication order
49.
I turn to consider the third respondent’s
adjudication in light of the discussion above.
50.
The applicant contends that paragraph 1.4.1, read
with paragraph 7.1, of the order is ambiguous in that it might be
interpreted
to suggest that the applicant transfers
levies
imposed
on
a
previous owner. I have already indicated
that the previous owner had settled his levies in full, and that the
first respondent’s
complaint was that levies were imposed on
him despite the fact that he developed his property. The fact
that the third respondent
was under the impression that the matter
concerned the “inheritance” of levies is borne out by his
reasoning in the
adjudication award.
51.
The applicant argues that, insofar as the third
respondent’s ruling is premised on the erroneous assumption
that levies imposed
on a previous owner are transferred to a new
owner, the third respondent erred. His order is liable to be
set aside.
Irrelevant considerations were taken into account,
alternatively, the order is not rationally connected to the
information before
the third respondent (in the language of,
respectively, section 6(2)(e)(iii) and section 6(2)(f)(ii)(cc) of
PAJA).
52.
The applicant submits further that the third
respondent’s order falls to be set aside because he relied on
the Conventional
Penalties Act 15 of 1962 (“the CPA”)
despite the fact that neither of the parties had referred thereto.
Neither
the applicant nor the first respondent was given notice of
the fact that the third respondent would consider the complaint on
the
basis of the CPA, and could therefore not make submissions in
that regard. The order was thus procedurally unfair as
contemplated
in section 6(2)(c) of PAJA.
53.
In any event, the applicant submits, the third
respondent’s reliance on the CPA was misplaced because, for an
order to be
made in relation to the reduction of a penalty under
section 3 of the CPA, a complainant is required to plead and prove
that the
penalty complained of is “
out
of proportion to the prejudice suffered by the creditor
”
(see
Murcia Lands CC v Erinvale Estate Home
Owners Association
[2004] 4 All SA 656
(C) at
paras [21] to [28]).
In casu
,
the first respondent did not rely on the CPA and there was thus no
evidence before the third respondent upon which he could assess
whether the penalty imposed by clause 9.10 was disproportionate to
the prejudice suffered by the applicant.
54.
The applicant submits, lastly, that the third
respondent erred in regarding the imposition of penalty levies as
amounting to unfair
administrative action under PAJA. The
imposition of the penalties does not amount to administrative action
because they are
imposed in terms of a private contractual
arrangement concluded between private persons. The terms of the
applicant’s
constitution are not enforceable against the public
at large, and the applicant does not exercise a public power or
perform a public
function when imposing the levies (see the
definition of “administrative action” in section 1 of
PAJA, and see
Mount Edgecombe supra
at paras [19] to [20], and [23] to [24]).
55.
A consideration of the third respondent’s
adjudication award bears out the validity of the applicant’s
complaints.
The third respondent misunderstood the factual
position (the
legal
principles governing judicial review based on
mistake of fact are set out in
South
Durban Community Environmental Alliance v MEC for Economic
Development, Tourism and Environmental Affairs: KwaZulu-Natal
Provincial Government and another
2020 (4) SA
453
(SCA) at para [23]), erred in treating the imposition of the
levies as administrative action, and embarked on a determination of
the dispute on the basis of the CPA upon which neither of the parties
had relied, without giving them an opportunity to make submissions
in
that regard. Had this been a run-of-the-mill judicial review
application under PAJA the adjudication order would have
been set
aside and referred to the third respondent for re-adjudication.
56.
Given, however, this Court’s views as
regards the proper interpretation of clause 9.10, and given the
nature of the Rule 57
statutory appeal, how is the Court to determine
the dispute? Section 57 of the Act does not set out a Court’s
powers
in determining the statutory appeal. The applicant came
to Court for the setting aside of the adjudication order.
Although
the applicant’s case did not turn solely on the narrow
ground of an error of law (since it had, in the alternative, been
brought under PAJA), the Court has come to a conclusion on the basis
of a question of law.
57.
Section 54 of the Act provides that an
adjudicator may decide as follows in determining an application:
“
(1)
If the application is not dismissed, the adjudicator must make an
order-
(a)
granting or refusing
each part of the relief sought by the applicant;
(b)
in the case of an
application which does not qualify for a waiver of adjudication fees,
apportioning liability for costs;
(c)
including a
statement of the adjudicator's reasons for the order; and
(d)
drawing attention in
the prescribed form to the right of appeal.
(2)
An order may require a person to act, or refrain from acting, in a
specified way.
(3)
The order may contain such ancillary and ensuing provisions as the
adjudicator considers
necessary or appropriate.
(4)
The order must set the time-
(a)
when the order takes
effect; or
(b)
within which the
order must be complied with.
(5)
…”
58.
As the statutory appeal is in the nature of a
“
review
,
a
limited re-hearing 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
(see
Tikly
v Johannes supra
), I am of the view that the
Court is entitled to grant an order which the adjudicator would have
been entitled to grant under section
54 of the Act,
mutatis
mutandis
.
59.
This approach will be reflected in the order set
out below.
Costs
60.
The application was not formally opposed, and
there will accordingly be no order as to costs.
Order
61.
In all of these circumstances, it is ordered as
follows:
(1)
The appeal in terms of section 57 of the Community Schemes Ombud
Service Act 9 of 2011 (“the
Act”) is upheld to the
limited extent set out in paragraph 2 of this order.
(2)
Paragraph 1.4.1, read with paragraph 7.1, of the adjudicator’s
order dated 5 May 2022
made in terms of section 54 of the Act is set
aside and replaced with the following order:
“
The
Respondent is ordered, with immediate effect, 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”.
VAN ZYL AJ
I agree and it is so
ordered.
SHER J
Appearances
:
For
the applicant:
J.B. Engelbrecht,
instructed
by BVPG Attorneys
The
first respondent in person
No
appearance for the second and third respondents
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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