Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 99South Africa
Spalding v Moquini Homeowners' Association (1328/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 99 (20 April 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Spalding v Moquini Homeowners' Association (1328/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 99 (20 April 2023)
Spalding v Moquini Homeowners' Association (1328/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 99 (20 April 2023)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(
EASTERN
CIRCUIT LOCAL DIVISION, THEMBALETHU)
Case
No.:
1328/2021
In
the matter between:
MARC
SPALDING
Applicant
and
MOQUINI
HOMEOWNERS’ ASSOCIATION
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ELECTRONICALLY ON 20 APRIL 2023
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD,
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This
is an opposed application in which the applicant seeks the following
relief:
1.
Declaring that the current constitution of the Respondent, marked
‘Version 3’ is void,
ab initio
, and, as such, of
no force and/or effect.
2.
Declaring the Respondent’s constitution approved by the Mossel
Bay Municipality [“
the Municipality”
] and the
Developer, during the subdivision application in respect of MOQUINI
COASTAL ESTATE [“
the Mouqini Estate”
] [“
Version
0”
], to be the only valid constitution of the Respondent.
3.
Terminating the appointments of all non-resident members of the
Respondent, currently serving as
Executive Committee [“
Excom”
]
Members of the Respondent with immediate effect;
4.
Directing that the Developer, Moquini Coastal Estate (Pty) Ltd [“
the
Developer”
], as duly represented by Henk de Bruyn, within
30 (thirty) days of this order, appoint resident members of the
Respondent to serve
as Executive Committee Members of the Respondent
as provided for in the respondent’s constitution Version 0.
[2]
These proceedings were launched on 22 October
2021, some months after the applicant launched proceedings at the
Community Schemes
Ombud Service (“
CSOS”
)
on 8 November 2020, the details of which are discussed later. The
CSOS proceedings were still pending when these proceedings were
launched.
[3]
On 22 February 2022, a few months after launching
these proceedings, the applicant launched urgent proceedings seeking
to interdict
the Executive Committee (“
Excom”
)
of the respondent from convening its Annual General Meeting (“
AGM”
),
which was scheduled for 4 March 2022, and to interdict the Excom from
exercising any of its constitutional powers, pending the
finalization
of these proceedings. The urgent proceedings were referred to
mediation after the applicant’s counsel indicated
in open court
that the applicant no longer wished to pursue the interdictory relief
relating to the AGM. The issue remaining with
regards to the
interdict proceedings relates to costs.
B.
THE RELEVANT BACKGROUND
[4]
The applicant has been a member of the respondent
since October 2002, when he bought property at the Mouqini Estate. He
has also
served as part of the Excom for numerous periods, the last
of which ended on
6 March 2020.
[5]
The
respondent is
described
in both versions of its constitution that are the subject of these
proceedings as “the Moquini Homeowners Association,
established
for the Development
[1]
at the
instance of the Mossel Bay Municipality in terms of section 29(1) of
the Land Use Planning Ordinance 15/1985 when approving
of the
subdivision of the Remainder of Farm [....] Mossel Bay (“
Farm
[....]”
),
in terms of Section 25(1) read with Section 42(1) of the said
Ordinance”.
[6]
Indeed, on 12 December
1997
the Provincial Department of Housing, Local Government and Planning
(“
the
Department”
)
approved an application for the rezoning and
subdivision of Farm [....] in terms of section 16, read with section
42(1), of the
(now repealed) Land Use Planning Ordinance, 15 of 1985
(“
LUPO”
). One of the
conditions
imposed for the approval was that “
a
Home Owner’s Association be formed which is compulsory, the
constitution of which will ensure and must include the
environmental/architectural
standards to be maintained”
.
[7]
On 26 August 1999 the inaugural AGM of the
respondent was held. There, some constitutional amendments were
adopted by the respondent.
The parties differ as to the status of the
document that was amended at the inaugural AGM.
C.
THE PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS
[8]
According to the applicant, the document amended
at the inaugural AGM was a constitution - Version 0 - whilst
according to the respondent
it was a draft which had not yet been
adopted, and which needed amending, and was so amended.
[9]
The significance of this difference between the
parties is firstly that clause 7a of Version 0 provided that “
Excom
shall consist of five (5) persons who shall be resident members or
the spouses of resident members. Any Excom member shall
be eligible
for re-election”
. The applicant
states that, except for when he was part of the Excom between 2019
and 2020, the respondent has been acting in contravention
of this
provision since 1999 in that the Excom has consistently consisted of
mostly non-resident members.
[10]
Another provision on which the applicant places
great reliance is paragraph 14 of Version 0 which provides that any
amendment or
addition to the constitution must be confirmed by the
Municipality and the Developer in writing. The applicant states that,
contrary
to paragraph 14 of Version 0 the respondent has adopted
numerous constitutional amendments from 1999 to 2021 without the
approval
of the Municipality or the Developer. In this regard it is
common cause that since the inaugural meeting there have been
approximately
3 adoptions of the constitution by AGM's of the
respondent on 17 May 2002, 5 March 2010 and 5 March 2021. Some
constitutional amendments
were again made recently, in March 2023.
[11]
It is also common cause that on 3 March 2021 the
Municipality approved an amended version of the respondent’s
constitution,
referred to in these proceedings as Version 3.
According to the applicant, this version was not approved by the
members of the
respondent at an AGM before submission to the
Municipality. Neither was it approved by the Developer in terms of
paragraph 14 of
Version 0, which is common cause.
[12]
The result, according to the applicant, is that
there remains only one valid constitution of the respondent, namely
Version 0. And
since the appointment of non-resident members on the
Excom has been contrary to section 7a thereof from 1999, all such
current
appointments must be terminated with immediate effect, and
the Developer must be directed to appoint resident members to serve
on the Excom within 30 days.
[13]
The respondent’s case is that Version 0 was
a draft of the respondent’s constitution which had no status
other than
for use as an attachment to the brochure used for
marketing the Moquini Estate. At the inaugural AGM, the draft was
adopted by
means of a list of amendments which were adopted there.
One notable amendment which appears from the minutes of the inaugural
AGM
was the deletion of the reference to ‘resident’
members in section 7a of Version 0. The result is that, since the
inaugural
AGM, it was no longer a requirement for membership of the
Excom that individuals be resident members of the respondent. The
applicant
disputes the respondent’s version that version 0 was
a draft, and argues that if that is the case, everything done by the
respondent since its inception has been unlawful and invalid and
ultra vires
.
[14]
The respondent further relies on the
subsequent constitutional amendments which were adopted at different
AGM’s, the last
of which was on 3 March 2023.
The
current version of the constitution relied upon by the respondent is
Version 3, which was approved by the Municipality on 3
March 2021,
and was adopted by the respondent’s members at an AGM held on 5
March 2010, and again on 5 March 2021, with few
amendments. The
respondent further argues that, to the extent that there may have
been non-compliances with the requirements complained
about by the
applicant, the respondent has continued to rely on those amendments
in good faith. In any event, the respondent states
that the applicant
has not pointed to any prejudice suffered by him as a result of the
non-compliances he relies upon.
[15]
As for the requirement that the Developer should
approve any constitutional amendments, the respondent refers to the
definition
of “the Developer” contained in all the
versions of the respondent’s constitution since 1999, most
notably Versions
0 and Version 3. They define “
the
Developer”
as “
Moquini
Coastal Estate (Pty)Ltd
or its
successors in title
to the
Remainder of Farm [....] Mossel Bay”
.
In this regard, the respondent emphasizes that it is the successor in
title of the Developer since 9 July 2004 when the latter
transferred
the Moquini Estate to it. Since then, the Moquini Estate has been
held in common in the name of the respondent. In
any event, the
respondent states that the requirement of the Developer's approval
for constitutional amendments was deleted at
the AGM of 5 March 2010,
of which the applicant was a part and member of Excom.
[16]
Although the
applicant admits that, notionally,
the respondent is the successor in title of the Developer, he
disputes the lawfulness of any
constitutional amendments subsequent
to Version 0. He also points to correspondence sent by the respondent
in July 2020 to the
Developer, in which the respondent’s
deponent was of the view that the Developer’s approval was
still required at that
point for purposes of amending the
respondent’s constitution.
[17]
The respondent has, in addition to the above
defences, raised a number of preliminary points. First, that
the
Municipality was exercising administrative action as contemplated in
the
Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
when it
approved Version 3 in terms of
s29(3)(g)
of LUPO, and that
accordingly a review application ought to have been brought for the
setting aside of the Municipality’s
approval of Version 3, and
the Municipality ought to have been joined as a party. Second, that
all Exco members impacted by the
relief sought in paragraph 3 of the
notice of motion have a direct and substantial interest in the
outcome of the proceedings and
should have been joined and cited by
name. Third, the Developer, which is the subject of the mandatory
interdict sought in prayer
4, should have been joined as a party to
the proceedings. Fourth, that the applicant has failed to exhaust the
proceedings already
instituted before the CSOS.
Because
of the approach I adopt in this judgment, I deal with the last of
these issues.
D.
THE CSOS PROCEEDINGS
[18]
As I have already indicated, it is common cause
that the applicant has initiated proceedings before the CSOS in
August 2020 in which
he seeks the following relief:
a.
That the constitutional amendment removing “resident”
as
a requirement for an Excom member in 1999 be declared
unconstitutional, due to the lack of evidence that
quorum
was present and/or that
the amended constitution was approved
by the Developer and the Mossel Bay Municipality.
b.
That all non-resident members of the Excom resign
from Excom and be replaced by elected resident members.
c.
That
the inaugural amendments to the
Constitution made on 26 August 1999 be declared null and void for
lack of a quorum at the meeting
and the absence of confirmation of
the amendments by the Developer and the Municipality as is required
by section 14 of the Constitution.
d.
That all subsequent amendments to the Constitution be declared null
and void for the absence of confirmation by the Developer and the
Municipality as is required by section 14 of the Constitution;
and
e.
That the non-resident Excom members resign and new Excom be elected
from resident members which is in line with the original Constitution
clause 7(a).
[19]
It is immediately apparent that, save for the consequential relief
sought in
prayer 4 of the notice of motion in these proceedings -
that the Developer should select new Exco members from the ranks of
resident
members - the remedy sought in the CSOS proceedings is
similar, if not the same as the relief claimed in these proceedings.
It
is also common cause that the relief sought in the CSOS is based
on the same facts and issues as those which form the basis of these
proceedings.
[20]
In response to this observation the applicant’s
counsel argued before me that the dispute that is pending before the
CSOS
relates to internal administration issues of the respondent,
which is the jurisdiction of the CSOS, whereas these proceedings turn
on the status of respondent. I note that this argument is in contrast
to averments made in the applicant’s papers (including
in the
urgent interdict) and heads of argument where it is stated that “
the
outstanding CSOS matters and in [this] application turn on the status
of the respondent’s Excom and the legality and validity
of the
respondent’s constitution”
.
Whatever these statements mean, the provisions which govern CSOS
proceedings require examination.
[21]
The CSOS proceedings are instituted in terms of
section 38 of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 (“
the
CSOS Act”
). The dispute
referred by the applicant was accepted by the ombud, an indication
that the dispute falls within the jurisdiction
of the CSOS. In terms
section 42(a),
an ombud must reject an application by written
notice to the applicant if the relief sought is not within
the jurisdiction
of the CSOS.
[22]
On 27 October 2020
c
onciliation
proceedings were held in terms of section 47, and were unsuccessful,
and a certificate of non-conciliation was issued
on 11 November 2020.
Thereafter, the dispute was referred to adjudication in terms of
section 48. It is common cause that the CSOS
proceedings
have
not been withdrawn and are still under consideration by the office of
the CSOS.
[23]
Section 39 of the CSOS Act sets out the headings of relief that may
be sought
in that forum. They include ‘scheme governance
issues’ and relief relating to meetings of associations.
As regards
scheme governance issues, a referral may seek the
following orders in terms of section 39(3):
“
(a)
an order requiring the association to
record a new scheme governance provision consistent with a provision
approved by the association
;
(b)
an order requiring the association to approve and record a new
scheme governance provision;
(c)
an order declaring that a scheme
governance provision is invalid and requiring the association to
approve and record a new scheme
governance provision to remove the
invalid provision
; or
(d)
an order declaring that a scheme governance provision,
having regard to the interests of all owners and occupiers
in the
community scheme, is unreasonable, and requiring the association to
approve and record a new scheme governance provision-
(i)
to remove the provision; (ii) if appropriate, to restore an earlier
provision;
(iii)
to amend the provision; or
(iv)
to substitute a new provision.”
(my
emphasis)
[24]
In terms of section 1, ‘scheme governance documentation’
includes
a constitution, and ‘scheme governance provision’
has a corresponding meaning. By parity of reasoning, ‘scheme
governance issues’, which are referred to in section 39(3)
above must include issues relating to the constitution of an
association. It is my considered view that the relief sought in
paragraphs 1 and 2 of the
notice of motion in the
current proceedings
amounts to what is described in paragraphs
39(3)(a) and (c) above,
in terms of which the
applicant seeks orders declaring provisions of a constitution
invalid, and replacement thereof with other
constitutional
provisions,
respectively
.
[25]
As regards relief available in respect of meetings, section 39(4)
provides
that a referral may seek one or more of the following
orders:
“
(a)
an order requiring the association to call a general
meeting of its members to deal with specified business;
(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
;…”
(my emphasis)
[26]
The applicant’s complaints regarding the
appointment of non-resident members into the Excom and decisions
taken by them fall
within the purview of these provisions. In terms
of the case of the applicant here, the relief sought in paragraphs 3
and 4 of
the notice of motion constitutes consequential relief of the
declaratory orders sought in paragraphs 1 and 2. Whether a case is
made out for any of the relief sought in any of the paragraphs of the
notice of motion is a matter for another occasion.
[27]
What is important for present purposes is that,
upon consideration of the relief sought in these proceedings,
including the substance
and nature of the complaints raised by the
applicant, it is clear that these proceedings concern the same issues
raised before
the CSOS. Here, as in the CSOS, the applicant seeks to
declare provisions of a constitution (Version 3) void for failure to
follow
certain constitutional requirements (contained in Version 0)
concerning the make-up of the Excom as well as the manner in which
the impugned constitution came about.
[28]
The
question is whether this Court should, or can, refuse to grant the
relief sought by the applicant on that basis.
That
question has been answered in the affirmative in this Division in the
matter of
Heathrow
Property
Holdings
No 3 CC and Others v Manhattan Place Body Corporate and Others
[2]
.
I am in agreement with the considerations mentioned in
Coral
Island Body Corporate v Hoge
[3]
and
Heathrow
Property
[4]
that the policy considerations which informed the introduction of the
CSOS Act lead to the conclusion that the CSOS is intended
to be the
primary dispute resolution forum in matters which resort under its
jurisdiction. It was
established
by statute for the expeditious, informal and cost-effective
resolution of particular disputes which involve the application
of
specialized or technical knowledge or experience.
And
this Court should be reluctant to permit parties to bypass the
mechanisms created by that statute.
[29]
A case in point applies to the
circumstances of this case, where the applicant has approached this
Court for far-reaching relief,
the effect of which is to vitiate
decisions (constitutional amendments) and institutions (Excom
committees) which have been in
operation since approximately 1999. In
terms of the CSOS Act, such relief must be instituted within 60 days
after the impugned
decision was made. Yet the applicant approached
this Court in October 2021, with no explanation for why he did not
bring it sooner,
or why he decided to bring it when he did. This
creates a strong impression that the applicant seeks to bypass the
provisions of
the CSOS Act. The prejudice to the respondents and its
members by this delay is evident.
[30]
The applicant has furthermore not furnished any
explanation for why he cannot await the outcome of the CSOS. As I
have already indicated,
the relief sought there is the same, in form
and in substance, as the relief sought here. And to the extent that
the applicant
persists with his view that the relief sought here
relates to status whereas the relief sought in the CSOS relates to
internal
workings of the respondent, that argument is not supported
by the content of CSOS Act provisions I have already discussed above,
which make no such distinction. I find no merit in this argument.
Both
fora
have the power to declare provisions of an association’s
constitution invalid, remove them and replace them with the new
contended provisions. And both
fora
have the power to declare resolutions taken at a meeting contrary to
the provisions of a constitution to be void or invalid. And
that, in
essence, is what the applicant seeks in both
fora
.
[31]
In
the circumstances of this case, in which the primary relief sought is
in the form of declaratory orders, the fact of the pending
proceedings at the CSOS is a matter that I consider relevant in the
exercise of this Court's discretion regarding whether or not
to grant
the relief.
[5]
[32]
There is also to consider, the administration of justice. In terms of
section
56 of the CSOS Act
a decision
of
the CSOS is enforceable as if it were a judgment of a court, and,
in
terms of section 57,
is
subject to
statutory appeal. It is undesirable to have two judgments from
different
fora
dealing
with the same issue. There is always the possibility that those
judgments may have contradictory pronouncements.
[33]
For all the reasons discussed in this judgment, I am of the view that
the applicant’s
application should be struck off the roll, on
the basis of the pending CSOS proceedings. Should either party wish
to appeal the
outcome of those proceedings, they have a statutory
right to approach a court at that stage.
E.
COSTS
[34]
As
regards costs, there is already precedent
[6]
for this Court to use its discretion in respect of costs to
discourage inappropriate resort to it in relation to a case that
should
more appropriately have been taken to the CSOS. In the case of
Heathrow
Property
the Court granted punitive costs. Importantly in this case, after the
applicant approached this Court for relief in this application
and in
the urgent application, the respondent addressed several letters
imploring the applicant to await the outcome of the CSOS
proceedings,
to no avail. There remains no explanation for why the applicant has
chosen
to
litigate in two
fora
simultaneously.
The applicant has done so recklessly. I am of the view that he should
bear the costs of these proceedings on an
attorney and client scale.
[35]
As
I have already indicated, the costs of the urgent proceedings need to
be determined. This was in terms of a court order taken
by the
parties on 2 May 2022 in terms of which costs could be determined by
the Court if mediation between the parties failed.
I have already
indicated that the applicant’s counsel indicated in open court
at the hearing of the urgent interdict that
the applicant no longer
wished to pursue the primary urgent relief it sought. This was after
the respondent was forced to oppose
the proceedings with very little
notice
[7]
. And even though the
mediation attempt failed, the applicant abandoned the urgent relief
it sought and did not persist with it.
The urgent applicant was
clearly an abortive exercise. It would not be fair for the respondent
to be placed out of pocket for those
abortive proceedings.
F.
ORDER
[36]
In the circumstances, the following
relief is granted:
a.
The
applicant’s
application is struck off the roll, with costs to be paid on an
attorney and client scale.
b.
The applicant is to
pay the costs of the urgent proceedings launched on 22 February 2022,
on an attorney and client scale.
N
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD
Judge
of the High Court
[1]
The
‘Development’ is defined as “
the
subdivision established or to be established on the Remainder of
Farm 284 Mossel Bay, by virtue of a General Plan in one or
more
phases”
.
[2]
Heathrow
Property Holdings No 3 CC and Others v Manhattan Place Body
Corporate and Others
2022
(1) SA 211 (WCC)
[3]
Coral
Island Body Corporate v Hoge
2019
(5) SA 158
(WCC) para 8 and 9.
[4]
At
paras 56 – 60.
[5]
Section
21(1)(c)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
;
Proxi
Smart Services (Pty) Ltd v Law Society of South Africa and Others
2018
(5) SA 644
(GP) para 69.
[6]
See
Coral
Island
and
Heathrow
Property.
[7]
The
papers were delivered on or about 22 February 2022, and the
respondent was required to deliver an answering affidavit by 25
February 2022.
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