Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 20South Africa
Mare and Others v Akarana Home Owners Association and Others (10147/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 20 (28 February 2022)
Judgment
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## Mare and Others v Akarana Home Owners Association and Others (10147/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 20 (28 February 2022)
Mare and Others v Akarana Home Owners Association and Others (10147/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 20 (28 February 2022)
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sino date 28 February 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case Number: 10147 /
2019
In
the matter between:
DIETLOF
ZIEGFRIED MARE
First
Applicant
WILLEM
TOBIAS HANEKOM
Second
Applicant
JACOBUS
THEODORUS DU TOIT
Third
Applicant
HENRIETTE
CHRISTINE MARE
Fourth
Applicant
and
AKARANA
HOME OWNERS ASSOCIATION
First
Respondent
LA
BELLA VITA WINE ESTATE PROPERTY OWNERS
Second
Respondent
ASSOCIATION
MEMBERS
OF THE FIRST RESPONDENT LISTED
Third
to Eighth Respondents
IN
ANNEXURE ‘A’
MEMBERS
OF BOTH THE FIRST AND SECOND
Ninth
to Twenty Sixth Respondents
RESPONDENTS
LISTED IN ANNEXURE ‘B’
MEMBERS
OF THE FIRST RESPONDENT, SECOND
Twenty
Seventh to Thirty Ninth Respondents
RESPONDENT
AND THE SANTÉ WINELANDS BODY
CORPORATE
LISTED IN ANNEXURE ‘C’
THE
DRAKENSTEIN MUNICIPALITY
Fortieth
Respondent
Coram:
Wille, J
Heard:
31
st
of January 2022
Delivered:
28
th
of February 2022
JUDGMENT
WILLE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an opposed application under and in terms of which the
applicants
seek an order for the appointment of an administrator to
control the affairs of the first and second respondents. The
application
is piloted in accordance with the provisions of a
municipality by-law.
[1]
In
terms of this by-law, an administrator may be appointed to such an
owners’ association if that association ceases
to function or
does not carry out its obligations. It is not the subject of
any dispute that the first and the second respondents
are such
owners’ associations.
[2]
The applicants are members of the first respondent and they are also
members of the second respondent. Certain disputes exist
between the members of both the first and second respondents in
connection with issues that allegedly concern the management and the
governance of the first and the second respondent.
[3]
These disputes allegedly primarily involve a member of the first
respondent and a group of her followers
[2]
,
who purport to be the validly appointed trustees of the first
respondent. Moreover, they adopt the position that they have
the right to conduct the management and governance of the first
respondent.
[4]
Inextricably linked to this dispute is the issue of certain wrangled
voting rights in accordance with the various constitutions of the
first respondent and the second respondent. This in turn
goes
to the issue of the validity of the appointment of certain members as
the trustees of the first respondent and also the second
respondent.
[5]
These disputes no doubt triggered certain further discrete action
proceedings by another disgruntled member of the first respondent and
the second respondent
[3]
,
against,
inter
alia
,
the first respondent. These action proceedings are pending.
These action proceedings are precisely connected with
certain
declaratory relief aimed at attacking,
inter
alia
,
the validity of some of the constitutional provisions of the first
respondent.
[6]
The purpose of this current application is solely to attempt to
secure an interim holding pattern in order to achieve the proper
management and governance of the affairs of the first and second
respondent. Undoubtedly, there are a number of factual disputes
which are not capable of being resolved by way of these discrete
application proceedings.
[7]
On this score, it is contended that these disputes, although they
exist, are not relevant to the determination of this application.
This specifically because, the applicants seek an order
that an
independent third party be interposed only for a limited period of
time, alternatively,
pendente lite.
The applicants
contend for a specific statutory remedy in terms of the relevant
by-law.
IN LIMINE
[8]
The active respondents put up a shield in the form of a counter-claim
to the effect that the enabling section
[4]
is
ultra
vires
the powers of the local municipality. More specifically that
the wording thereof is vague and irrational. This,
inter
alia
,
in the following respects, namely; that it does not address matters
such as the duration of the appointment of the administrator;
that
the requisite qualifications for an administrator are not outlined;
that the remuneration of the administrator and the payment
thereof is
not engaged with and the circumstances under which the administrator
may be removed are not specified in any manner
or form.
[9]
In order to promote this argument, the active respondents applied
to
join the local municipality as a respondent. The said
municipality is so properly joined and is before court. The local
municipality has since delivered a detailed answering affidavit in
which it challenges the active respondents’
ultra vires
contentions in this connection. The active respondents also
challenge the grounds upon which the applicants seek to invoke
the
enabling section. An argument is also chartered to the effect
that the jurisdictional requirements set out in the enabling
section
have not been met.
[10]
In addition, some collateral challenges are also indicated, namely,
that the active
respondents complain about the appropriateness of the
entity that the applicants propose as the administrator. So
too, are
the terms of the appointment of the administrator contested.
FACTUAL MATRIX AND
RELEVANT BACKGROUND
[11]
Initially, a development application was granted in favour of the
owner and developer
for the sub-division of the portion of a farm
into (7) portions of land in terms of the Act.
[5]
These sub-divided portions, in turn of necessity, stood exempt from
certain other planning provisions
[6]
.
In due course, the establishment of the first respondent ensued.
[12]
Thereafter, certain other exemptions followed in connection with a
change of the
land use relating to a portion of this parent property
and following upon this a re-zoning was authorized in connection with
the
parent property. However, this seemingly never materialized
and only one portion was thereafter correctly and formally re-zoned.
[13]
Besides, a number of processes then followed culminating in,
inter
alia
, a
resolution
[7]
that was adopted
determining that a requirement for the ultimate approval was that of
a constitution in respect of a homeowners’
association. This,
comprising the owners of all the separated erven that came about in
consequence of the sub-division of
the parent property. Thus,
the second respondent came into being.
[14]
Various zoning processes and procedures then followed a similar route
in respect
of what may be loosely described as the entire former
parent property. Thus, the first respondent came into being.
Similarly, a resolution was adopted determining that a requirement
for the ultimate approval was that of a constitution in respect
of a
homeowners’ association. This became the first
constitution
[8]
of the first
respondent. The re-zoning of a portion of the property over
which the second respondent exercised control, also
gave rise to the
obligation that the members of the second respondent were also
similarly, to be members of the first respondent.
[15]
In the end result, six of the seven sub-divided portions of the land
became individual
commercial farms and continued to be used as such
thereafter. The first respondent was,
inter
alia
,
accordingly made up of the following; the owners of the six
commercial farms that had derived from the sub-division of the
parent
property; the owners of (32) sectional title units that arose
from the further sub-divisions of portions thereof;
these being
the (20) erven forming part of the second respondent and, this
together with the (12) sectional title units in the
sectional title
scheme that was subsequently established.
[9]
[16]
The third to eighth respondents are owners of the farm properties and
are members
of the first respondent. According to the minutes
of the meeting
[10]
(and after
the launching of this application), six of the trustees were
representatives of the owners of the six farms. Only
one of the
trustees (Mrs Liebenberg), was not such a representative.
[17]
The ninth to twenty-sixth respondents are the owners of the
properties that form
part of both the first and the second
respondent. The twenty-seventh to thirty-ninth respondents are
the owners of the properties
that constitute some of the neighbouring
properties.
THE ENABLING ‘BY-LAW’
[18]
A local authority exercises its legislative and executive authority
by the implementation
of national and provincial legislation and by
its own by-laws. In addition, it also passes its by-laws in
connection with
matters contemplated in section 11(3) of the Local
Government : Municipal Systems Act
[11]
.
This, together with the involvement of the Western Cape Department of
Environmental Affairs and Development Planning.
[19]
The empowering provisions in MSA deal,
inter alia
, with the
administration and regulation of the local government affairs of a
local community and, also the monitoring of the impact
and
effectiveness of any services, policies, programmes or plans, in
respect whereof a local authority is empowered to pass by-laws
and in
connection with its decision making process.
[20]
A local authority fulfils this mandate to administer land use and
planning in accordance
with LUPO. This, together the applicable
scheme rules. Section 29 of the enabling legislation
[12]
,
gives a local authority the power to impose conditions in respect of
the compulsory establishment of an - ‘
owner’s
association’
– this, when approving the sub-division of the land in
question.
[21]
Section 29(2), in turn, indicates that the constitution of an owners’
association
falls to be approved by the appropriate local authority
before registration of transfer of the first unit of the land in
question.
[22]
There are in existence specific requirements so as to enable a local
authority to
exercise this oversight function for the proper
administration of properties falling within its area of jurisdiction.
It
is incontrovertibly so that a local authority is vested with
the power to effectively manage these developments after the initial
approval of the owners’ association’s constitutions.
The argument is that a local authority also specifically
has this
unbridled power in a case where an owners’ association ceases
to function or to carry out its obligations.
[23]
It is contended by the applicants, that it is in these circumstances,
that a local
authority has three discrete powers, namely; to
cause the owners’ association to be dis-established, or; to
take
action so as to rectify a failure by the owners’
association to meet any of its obligations, or; to request the
appointment
of an administrator who must have the powers of the
owners’ association by way of an order of court.
[24]
By way of elaboration, the argument is made that the first two of
these powers would
not yield any fruit while the third would lead to
a positive outcome. The applicants say this for,
inter alia
,
the following reasons; that it is for a local authority to
ensure that the constitution of the owners’ association
is
properly and correctly implemented; that it is necessary that a
local authority be afforded the mechanism to achieve this
desired
result where neither of the first two remedies will be appropriate or
effective.
[25]
Moreover, the position is taken that section 11(3) of the MSA
empowers a local authority
to pass a by-law such as that embodied in
section 30(1)(c). Further, in terms of section 156(5)
[13]
,
a local authority has the right to exercise any power concerning a
matter reasonably necessary for, or incidental to, the effective
performance of its functions.
[14]
CONSIDERATION
‘
DISPUTES
OF FACT’ AND THE VARIOUS ‘CONSTITUTIONS’
[26]
There are a number of disputed versions of the ‘constitutions’
of the
first respondent before me on the papers. In addition,
at the time when this application was launched, the relevant version
that was seemingly applicable was the ‘constitution’
adopted during the course of 2010. Further, on the papers,
a
new constitution was adopted during the course of 2021. No
doubt, there is a dispute as to the validity of a number of
these
‘constitutions’. Inextricably linked to these
disputes, are the disputes connected with the validity of
the
appointment of the persons currently acting as the ‘trustees’
of the first and the second respondent.
[27]
Some of these disputes have been simmering since at least 2017.
A number of
the applicants responded to these disputes by simply
refusing to pay some or all of their levies which were imposed upon
them.
Some of the current arrears by some of the applicants are
not insubstantial. Thereafter, they initiated the current
application
during the middle of 2019.
[28]
The active respondents adopt the position in their opposing papers
that the trustees
and management of the first respondent have engaged
in extensive and extended attempts, over a considerable period of
time, to
resolve all these rather unsavoury disputes between the
parties, by,
inter alia
, the following; by the
establishment of a task team; by conducting an investigation
and by the appointment of a mediator.
[29]
The majority of the owners in the first respondent, the second
respondent and the
body corporate have meaningfully engaged in
resolving these various challenges, including the terms of a new
‘constitution’
for the first respondent. Many
mediation meetings were held as a direct result of these concerted
efforts at compromise and
resolution of these many disputes.
[30]
It is part of the active respondents’ case that the second and
third applicants
have attempted to undermine this
‘resolution-process’ as none of the applicants have made
any attempt to resolve these
ongoing disputes. A further
complaint is raised that while the current application was
pending, the first and
fourth applicants and certain other members of
the first respondent, instituted an action in which they sought
declarations about
the validity of some of the ‘constitutions’
adopted after the initial constitution.
[31]
These action proceedings are pending. The validity of the
latest constitution
which was ‘adopted’ is also now
challenged in these action proceedings.
[15]
The applicants to a large extent concede that these are issues that
fall to be dealt with in the pending action proceedings.
THE ‘LEGAL’
DISPUTE
[32]
The argument is that the proposed ‘administrator’ will
not be able to
deal with and decide on the legal disputes,
specifically as to which ‘constitution’ is valid which in
turn is inextricably
linked to the voting rights of the members,
including whether the trustees have been validly appointed, or not.
It is indicated
that only a court can decide on these issues. The
applicants do not take issue with the ‘legal dispute’
argument
as they indicate that these disputes, to a large extent,
fall to be decided in the pending action.
THE ‘RELATIONAL’
DISPUTE
[33]
To the contrary, the respondents contend that an administrator will
not be placed
in a position to resolve the issue of the animosity,
inter alia
, that the second applicant harbours for one of the
other members whom, he has allegedly attempted to have be arrested.
It
is argued that it is precisely this species of animosity which
continues to fuel the bitterness between the opposing factions in
this development.
[34]
Furthermore, it is the case for the active respondents that the
appointment of an
administrator cannot and will not resolve the
underlying relational dispute. Put in another way, the
appointment of an administrator
will not be able to achieve the
purpose for which it is supposedly and primarily sought.
THE ‘ULTRA
VIRES’ ARGUMENT
THE ‘BY-LAW’
[35]
Section 30(1)(c) of the Drakenstein By-law on Municipal Land Use
Planning, indicates
as follows;
‘
If an owners’
association ceases to function or carry out its obligations, any
affected person, including a member of the
association, may apply …
to the High Court to appoint an administrator who must exercise the
powers of the owners’
association to the exclusion of the
owners’ association’
THE CONSTITUTION OF
THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA, 1996
[36]
Section 156(1) provides that a local authority has executive
authority in respect
of, and the right to administer,
inter alia,
the local government matters listed in Part B of Schedule 4.
Section 156(2), in turn, provides that a local authority may make
and
administer by-laws for the effective administration of the matters of
which it has the right to administer. One of the
matters listed
in Schedule 4 Part B is ‘
municipal planning’
. A
local authority may therefore make by-laws for the effective
administration of municipal planning.
[37]
The next enquiry is to attempt to analyse and interpret, within the
proper context,
the meaning of the term municipal planning. The
term ‘
municipal planning’
has been defined as
follows:
‘…
It is
clear that the word ‘planning’, when used in the context
of municipal affairs, is commonly understood to refer
to the control
and regulation of land use, and I have no doubt that it was used in
the Constitution with that common usage in mind’
[16]
[38]
The active respondents contend for the position that a local
authorities power to
control and regulate the use of land, by mere
definition, does not include the power to regulate the functioning
and activities
of a homeowners’ association. They say
this because on the ordinary meaning of the wording of the by-law,
the local
authority has purported to legislate to require that an
association carries out ‘
its obligations’
in
unqualified terms. I am not persuaded and I am not in favour of
this reasoning.
[39]
A local authority is vested with ancillary powers and accordingly has
the right to
exercise any power concerning a matter ‘
reasonably
necessary for, or incidental to, the effective performance of its
functions’
.
It must be so that in certain circumstances, which are of necessity,
fact dependent, a local authority may very well be
constitutionally
clothed with certain powers to regulate the affairs of a homeowners’
association. These powers may
indeed be reasonably necessary
for, or incidental to, a local authorities effective performance of
municipal planning in the control
and regulation of land use.
[17]
I accordingly do not find favour with the argument that section
30(1)(c) is beyond the powers of a local authority in that
it is
ultra
vires
and
invalid.
IS THE BY-LAW
‘TRIGGERD’ IN THIS CASE?
[40]
It is a trite principle of constitutional interpretation that where
it is reasonably
possible to construe a statute in such a way that it
does not give rise to constitutional inconsistency, such a
construction should
be preferred to another construction which,
although also reasonable, would give rise to such inconsistency.
[18]
[41]
Further, a statute may be ‘read-down’ to save it from
unconstitutionality.
Put in another way, it may be given a
limited meaning, in order to bring it within the bounds of
constitutionality. ‘Reading
down’ is an
interpretive tool in that it is:
‘…
a way
to save a statutory provision from constitutional invalidity by
giving it meaning – on its wording – that is
constitutionally compliant’
[19]
[42]
Accordingly, upon a proper construction and reading of section
30(1)(c), it is possible
to save it from invalidity by giving it a
restricted reading. This, by interpreting it to have reference
only to an owners’
association to where an such an association
ceases to function or carry out its obligations in such a manner, or
with the result,
that the municipality is unable to carry out its
municipal planning function effectively.
[20]
[43]
I say this because a ‘reading-down’ would also be
consistent with LUPO.
At the time when the initial application
was made for the sub-division, LUPO authorised the council to approve
this subject to
a condition that a homeowners association be
established. As a matter of logic, the object of a homeowners
association must
be to control and regulate the use of the land which
in turn relates to the municipal planning function of a
municipality.
[44]
The applicants do not make out a case or aver that the failures
[21]
,
of which they complain, have impacted on the local authorities
effective control and regulation of land use. The fortieth
respondent also does not charter this argument in that it does not
allege that the unsavoury disputes that exist in the homeowners’
associations have had any negative impact on the local authorities
effective control or regulation of land use. For these
reasons,
I take the view that section 30(1)(c) falls to be read down and saved
from invalidity by a restrictive interpretation.
IS THE BY-LAW OF ANY
‘ASSISTANCE’ TO THE APPLICANTS?
[45]
The active respondents contend that the first and second respondents
are fully functional
and continue to carry out their day-to-day
administration. By contrast, the applicants take the position
as a general proposition
that a homeowners’ association cannot
be said to be functioning and carrying out its obligations merely
because certain members,
who do not have authority to manage the
homeowners’ association, unilaterally carry out the day-to-day
administration.
This, purportedly on behalf of that
association.
[46]
What this really means is that the core complaint is that the persons
acting on behalf
of the homeowners’ association in carrying out
this administration are not authorised to do so. This is the
very issue
that falls to be decided in the pending action
proceedings. In this connection, the active respondents take
the position
that notwithstanding these festering disputes, the first
and the second respondents are functioning homeowners’
associations
that are effectively administering and taking care of
their day-to-day operations. Employees are paid, maintenance is
done
and creditors are settled.
[47]
In summary, the active respondents argue that section 30(1)(c) is
limited in its
operation to municipal planning matters.
Accordingly, it is not triggered in this case, because factually the
associations
are fully functional with regard to those matters.
Put in another way, the jurisdictional facts for the appointment of
an
‘administrator’, namely that the homeowners
associations have ceased to function or carry out their obligations
with
regard to municipal planning matters, is notably lacking.
On this, I agree.
WOULD THE APPOINTMENT
OF AN ADMINISTRATOR BE ‘IRRATIONAL’?
[48]
The applicants seek a statutory remedy. The power to appoint an
‘administrator’
in terms of section 30(1)(c), is and
remains, a discretionary power. The active respondents argue
that it would be irrational
to appoint an administrator when the
undisputed facts demonstrate no purpose in such appointment.
[49]
The evidence exhibits that the active respondents have made a number
of repeated
attempts to have the dispute resolved, including through
the appointment of mediators. It is advanced that the
applicants
have persistently objected to and obstructed those
attempts. Therefore, it is argued that the appointment of an
administrator
will not resolve either the underlying legal dispute or
the underlying relational dispute.
[50]
This notwithstanding, the applicants do not say that if an
administrator was appointed,
that this would result in an agreement
being reached on the way forward. This, with the resolution of
all the legal disputes.
Rather, they seek an order that the
administrator is to resolve the legal dispute by making a decision as
to the respective rights
of the parties.
[51]
However, in the same breath, the applicants concede in their replying
affidavit,
inter alia
, that the validity of the 2010
Constitution (and therefore the consequential appointment of the
trustees), has to be determined
by the court in the pending action
proceedings. In my view, the appointment of an administrator in
these circumstances would
serve no rational purpose.
THE ‘OUDEKRAAL’
PRINCIPLE
[52]
In a voluntary association, the members constitutionally bind
themselves to act in
a particular way in their relationships with
each other in relation to the objects of the association. This
principle has been
explained by the Constitutional Court as
follows:
[22]
‘
The rule of law
requires that no power be exercised unless it is sanctioned by law,
and no decision or step sanctioned by law may
be ignored based purely
on a contrary view. It is not open to any of us to pick and choose
which of the otherwise effectual consequences
of the exercise of
constitutional or statutory power will be disregarded and which given
heed to. Our foundational value of the
rule of law demands of us, as
a law-abiding people, to obey decisions made by those clothed with
the legal authority to make them
or else approach courts of law to
set them aside, so we may validly escape their binding force’
[53]
Put in another way, an association established by a constitution
cannot function
if its members are permitted to pick and choose which
of its decisions they will comply with. The voluntary
associations
that we are dealing with in this matter have been
established because the relevant local authority in the exercise of
its constitutional
and statutory powers, specifically required the
establishment of a homeowners’ association as a condition for
its approval
of the sub-division of the land in question. These
homeowners’ associations are not organs of state as they are
merely
created as part of a statutory scheme.
[54]
As a matter of logic, the applicants simply cannot ignore the
adoption of their various
disputed constitutions and the subsequent
election of trustees that followed. This, on the basis that in
their opinion this
was not validly done. These disputes cannot
fall to be resolved by the appointment of an administrator.
THE
COUNTER-APPLICATION
[55]
The old section
46 of the
Sectional
Titles Act
[23]
(now section 20
of the Sectional Titles Management Act, 8 of 2011), together with
paragraph 19 of the schedule thereto, indicates
that a body
corporate, a local authority, a judgment creditor of the body
corporate (for an amount of not less than R500,00), or
any owner or
any person having a registered real right in or over a unit, may
apply to a court for the appointment of an administrator.
[56]
Here, a court is given the power to appoint an administrator for an
indefinite or
a fixed period on such terms and conditions as to
remuneration as it deems fit. The administrator is to have the
powers and
duties, to the exclusion of the body corporate or such of
those powers and duties as the court may order or direct.
[57]
There is accordingly in existence a legislative precedent for a local
authority being
afforded the power to seek the appointment by a court
of an administrator to a sectional title body corporate. This
must
be so as our courts are obliged to give meaning to legislation,
however obscure, vague or intractable the language of such a statute
may be. Undoubtedly, our courts have the power to declare
sub-ordinate legislation void for vagueness. This, however
must
be done as a last resort.
[24]
[58]
The core question is whether the legislation in question creates
substantial uncertainty
in the minds of those who have to apply it or
those to whom it applies. Accordingly, in deciding whether
there is such substantial
uncertainty in certain sub-ordinate
legislation, only reasonable and not perfect lucidity is
required.
[25]
[59]
The active respondents adopt the position that the impugned section
does not prescribe
matters such as the duration of the appointment of
an administrator, the requisite qualifications for an administrator,
the remuneration
of the administrator or the circumstances under
which the administrator may be removed. I disagree with this
reasoning.
I say this because, these are precisely matters that
the court has the power to determine. The court is vested with
a wide
discretion to deal with these matters depending on the
circumstances of each case.
[60]
We are dealing here with a discretion in the form of a ‘hole in
a doughnut’.
In these circumstances it is precisely the
function of the court dealing with an application for the appointment
of an administrator,
to craft an appropriate order dealing with these
matters. This, in the exercise of its discretion, always
judicially exercised.
[61]
Further, section 30(3) of the by-law provides that the local
authority may seek to
recover from the members of the owners’
association the amount of any expenditure incurred by the local
authority in respect
of any action taken in terms of sub-section (1).
In these circumstances, in my view, the active respondents
attacks upon
the validity of section 30(1)(c) have no merit and fall
to be dismissed. This brings me to the issue of costs,
COSTS
[62]
In my view, caution falls to be exercised in connection with the
issuing out of a
costs order against the applicants in these peculiar
circumstances. I say this because the litigation which has been
pursued
by way of action, may turn out to be successful. The
trial court dealing with this action, will in my view, no doubt be in
the position of having the ‘benefit of hindsight’ having
heard all the
viva voce
evidence in connection with these
disputes.
[63]
That having been said, it would also be inappropriate for the trial
court to ‘re-consider’
the costs of and incidental to
this application
- afresh
– as it were. In the
circumstances, in my view, the most appropriate order would be that
the costs of and incidental
to this application and the
counter-application (as between the applicants and the active
respondents), shall become costs in the
main action. Put in
another way, these latter costs are not reserved, but are ordered to
be costs in the main action.
[64]
However, the costs incurred by the fortieth respondent, remain on an
entirely different
footing. The active respondents were
unsuccessful in connection with their ‘invalidity challenges’
and these
are separate and discrete costs as far as the fortieth
respondent is concerned. In the circumstances, these costs are
to
be paid by the active respondents.
CONCLUSION
[65]
Most significantly, at the time when the application was launched,
the active respondents
were purportedly governed by the
constitutional provisions as set out in 2010. This remains the
subject of a factual dispute
that cannot be decided in these
application proceedings. This dispute reared its head in 2007.
[66]
This dispute also extends its tentacles as to whether or not the
current trustees
of the first and second respondents have been
validly appointed. This too, cannot be decided without
viva
voce
evidence to be adduced by way of the pending action proceedings.
These actions proceedings (so I am told), are due to be
heard towards
the middle of 2022.
[26]
In the action proceedings, the purported appointment of the alleged
trustees is also sought to be set aside. It would
accordingly
be inappropriate to appoint an administrator for this interim period.
[67]
It is for all these reasons, that the following order is issued out
in connection
with this application and the counter-application
thereto, namely;
1.
That the main application is dismissed.
2.
That the counter-application is dismissed.
3.
That the costs of and incidental to the main application and the
counter-application, as between the
applicants and the active
respondents (the third to the thirty-ninth respondents), inclusive of
the costs of two counsel (where
so employed), on the scale as between
party and party (as taxed or agreed), shall become costs in the
pending action proceedings
under case number 11867/2020.
4.
That the active respondents (the third to the thirty-ninth
respondents), jointly and severally, the one
paying, the others to be
absolved, shall be liable for the costs of and incidental to the
counter-application, incurred at the
instance of the fortieth
respondent, on the scale as between party and party (as taxed or
agreed).
E. D. WILLE
Judge of the High Court
Cape town
[1]
Section 30(1)(c) of
the
‘Drakenstein
Municipality
By-Law on Municipal Land Use Planning (2018)’ - (the
‘by-law’).
[2]
The
‘active’ respondents.
[3]
In
these action proceedings there are no fewer than (6) plaintiffs’
(including Mr and Mrs Mare).
[4]
Section 30(1)(c) of the by-law.
[5]
The Subdivision of Agricultural Land Act, 70 of 1970.
[6]
The Land Use Planning Ordinance, 15 of 1985 (‘LUPO’)
- now the Western Cape Land Use Planning Act 2014.
[7]
A resolution at the instance of the ‘Winelands District
Council’.
[8]
The
2001 Constitution.
[9]
The ‘Santé Winelands Sectional Title Scheme’.
[10]
The
Annual General Meeting that was held on the 29
th
of
November 2019.
[11]
Act
3
of 2000 (‘MSA’).
[12]
The Drakenstein Municipality By-Law on Municipal Land Use
Planning: 2018.
[13]
The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,1996.
[14]
Cape
Metropolitan Council v Minister for Provincial Affairs and
Constitutional Development,
1999
JDR 0625 (C).
[15]
This
by way of a belated amendment to the particulars of claim.
[16]
Johannesburg
Municipality v Gauteng Development Tribunal and Others
2010
(2) SA 554
(SCA) para 41.
[17]
Mazibuko
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
2010
(4) SA 1 (CC).
[18]
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Others
2000
(2) SA 1
(CC) para [23].
[19]
Tronox
KZN Sands (Pty) Ltd v KwaZulu Natal Planning and Development Appeal
Tribunal and Others
2016
(3) SA 160
(CC) para [38].
[20]
It
seems to me that the main complaint is that there are ‘Annual
Financial Statements’ outstanding for some years.
[21]
These
failures now seem to be connected primarily with outstanding
financial statements of the first and second respondent.
[22]
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Speaker, National Assembly and Others
2016 (3) SA 580
(CC) para [75].
[23]
Act 95 of 1986.
[24]
The
Master v IL Back and Co Ltd,
1981
(4) SA 763
(CPD) at 770-771.
[25]
The
Master v IL Back, supra,
at
771A.
[26]
A
number of specific declarations are sought in connection with the
‘constitutions’ set them aside.
sino noindex
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