Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 234South Africa
Baxter v Ocean View Body Corporate and Others (A170/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 234; 2023 (2) SA 205 (WCC) (16 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
16 November 2022
Headnotes
the Body Corporate’s decision to levy a contribution computed at R23.00 per square metre on the unit owners’ exclusive use balcony areas, (ii) reinstating the previously levied contribution of R3.00 per square metre and (iii) directing that all amounts debited in excess of the latter amount be credited to the appellant’s account. The first respondent is the Body Corporate of Ocean View, a development scheme registered in terms of the Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986. The second respondent is the Community Schemes Ombud Service, a juristic person established in terms of s 3 of the CSOS Act.
Judgment
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## Baxter v Ocean View Body Corporate and Others (A170/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 234; 2023 (2) SA 205 (WCC) (16 November 2022)
Baxter v Ocean View Body Corporate and Others (A170/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 234; 2023 (2) SA 205 (WCC) (16 November 2022)
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FLYNOTES:
LEVIES AND EXCLUSIVE USE AREAS
Property
– Body corporate – Levies – Raised on exclusive
use areas – Where owner responsible for maintenance
and
repair – Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011,
s 3(1)(c).
Property
– Sectional title – Community Schemes Ombud –
Appeal – Time limit – Court’s powers
to grant
condonation – Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011,
s 57.
Republic
of South Africa
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
Number: A170/2022
Before:
The Hon.Mr Justice Binns-Ward
and
The
Hon. Ms Acting Justice De Wet
Decided
on the papers without an oral hearing
Date
of Judgment: 16 November 2022
In
the matter between:
KEVIN
BAXTER
Appellant
and
OCEAN
VIEW BODY
CORPORATE
First
Respondent
COMMUNITY
SCHEMES OMBUD SERVICES
Second
Respondent
N
FOCA
N.O.
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD
J and DE WET AJ:
[1]
This is an
appeal in terms of s 57(1)
[1]
of
the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 (‘the CSOS
Act’) wherein the appellant, who is the owner of a
unit in a
sectional titles development scheme, seeks orders (i) setting
aside the decision of the third respondent, the Adjudicator,
dated 13
June 2022, that upheld the Body Corporate’s decision to levy a
contribution computed at R23.00 per square metre
on the unit owners’
exclusive use balcony areas, (ii) reinstating the previously
levied contribution of R3.00 per square
metre and (iii) directing
that all amounts debited in excess of the latter amount be credited
to the appellant’s account.
The first respondent is the Body
Corporate of Ocean View, a development scheme registered in terms of
the
Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986
. The second respondent is the
Community Schemes Ombud Service, a juristic person established in
terms of s 3 of the CSOS Act.
[2]
The first respondent filed a notice to abide the decision of the
court
on condition that no costs order is sought against it. The
second and third respondents did not participate in these proceedings
and it is assumed that they also abide the decision of the court.
With the consent of the appellant and the first respondent, the
appeal is being disposed of on the papers, without an oral hearing.
[3]
The appeal was brought by way of motion proceedings in accordance
with
the guidelines stated in
Trustees, Avenues Body Corporate v
Shmaryahu and Another
2018 (4) SA 566
(WCC), (‘
Shmaryahu
’).
It was, however, brought outside the 30-day time period prescribed in
s 57(2) of the CSOS Act. Condonation for the
late lodging of the
appeal was accordingly also sought.
[4]
It is appropriate to treat first of the condonation application. The
question
whether it is within the court’s powers to grant
condonation was not addressed in the appellant’s written
argument.
It does not follow that the court has such powers in every
case in which a time limit for the institution of court proceedings
is statutorily prescribed and has not been complied with; see e.g.
Mohlomi v Minister of Defence
[1996] ZACC 20
(26 September
[1996] ZACC 23
;
1996); 1996 (12) BCLR 1559
;
1997 (1) SA 124
(CC) at para 17, where
Didcott J noted that the courts have no inherent power to condone
non-compliance with statutorily prescribed
time limits.
[5]
There does not, however, need to be to be an express provision in the
statute conferring a power of condonation. Depending on the context,
the existence or conferral of such a power might in a given
case be
implied upon a proper construction of the relevant provisions of a
statute. Such an exercise was undertaken by the late
Appellate
Division in analogous circumstances in
Phillips v Direkteur vir
Sensus
1959 (3) SA 370
(A).
[6]
The judgment in
Phillips
was concerned with whether a court
could condone non-compliance with a prescribed time limit in an
appeal from a decision of the
Race Classification Board that was
brought after the expiry of the time prescribed therefor in the
Population Registration Act,
1950. The appeal court acknowledged that
condonation could not be granted if the time limit provision in point
was a so-called
‘vervaltermym’ or ‘expiry period’,
with the implication that if the relevant right were not exercised
within
the prescribed time it would ipso facto be extinguished.
Having determined that the time limit in issue was not such a
provision,
the court reasoned that functions of the Board were
essentially that of a tailor-made adjudicative body that corresponded
closely
with those of an ordinary court. The court reviewed various
common law authority that supported the incidence of the power of
courts
to condone the bringing of appeals outside the prescribed time
limits and had regard to what the adverse practical effects would
be
were the statute in question construed to exclude such a power. It
concluded, on the basis of a broad contextual analysis, that
the
statute fell to be construed to imply a power in the court to condone
non-compliance with the prescribed time limit for the
lodging of an
appeal.
[7]
In our view, very similar considerations apply in the current matter.
The prescribed time limit does not appear to us to fit the
characteristics of an expiry period provision, and the exclusion of a
power of condonation could readily conduce to incorrect decisions
that could, and should be, rectified being irremediably visited
upon
members of community schemes. It is unlikely that the legislature
could have intended such an effect. It would be irreconcilable
with
the objects of the Act. The whole object of the CSOS Act is to
facilitate the cost-effective and relatively informal resolution
of
community scheme related disputes; cf.
Coral Island Body Corporate
v Hoge
[2019] ZAWCHC 58
(23 May
2019); 2019 (5) SA 158
(WCC) at
para 8-11. Its provisions should not be read in a way that would
unreasonably limit the proper ventilation of such disputes,
including
in appeals from the decisions of the Ombud Service. The CSOS Act does
not contain any procedural directions concerning
the lodging and
prosecution of the appeals permitted in terms of s 57. The
courts have consequently had themselves to determine
certain of the
material procedures to be followed. The necessary implication is that
the legislature intended to leave the procedural
aspects of s 57
to the courts to regulate.
[8]
In
Phillips
, the appeal court described the role of the
prescribed 30-day time limit for the lodging of appeals applicable in
that matter as
follows:
‘
Die
dertig dae bepaling is klaarblyklik ingevoer om ’n vertraging
in die daarstelling van ’n juiste register te voorkom.
Maar dit
spreek vanself dat ’n termynbepaling wat verlengbaar is nie
outomaties verleng sal word nie, dog slegs waar voldoende
rede vir
kondonasie aangevoer is. Gevolglik sou verlenging nie in stryd wees
nie met ’n bedoeling dat bespoediging van die
administratiewe
werking van die wet nie belemmer moet word nie
.’
[2]
[9]
By parity of reasoning, we have concluded that upon a proper
contextual
consideration of the provisions of s 57(2) of the
CSOS Act, the court does have the power, on good cause shown, to
condone
non-compliance with the 30-day time limit therein prescribed.
[10]
The delay
in lodging the appeal in the proper form was because the appellant’s
attorneys had initially understood that the
applicable procedure was
that determined upon in
Stenersen
and Tulleken Administration CC v Linton Park Body Corporate and
Another
[2019] ZAGPJHC 387 (24 October
2019); 2020 (1) SA 651
(GJ) for such
appeals brought in the Gauteng Division. In the face of this court’s
decision in
Shmaryahu
supra, which was confirmed, post
Stenersen
,
in
Kingshaven
Homeowners’ Association v Botha and others
[2020] ZAWCHC 92
(4 September 2020), their reliance on the Gauteng
decision was plainly misdirected. They were disabused when their
reliance on
Stenersen
in an appeal in terms of s 57 for another client resulted in
that matter being struck from the roll on account of its
non-compliance
with the procedural guidelines established for use in
such cases in this (and also the KwaZulu-Natal
[3]
)
Division; see
Trustees
of Alessio Body Corporate v Cottle and Others
[2022]
ZAWCHC 233
(15 August 2022).
[11]
The appellant’s initial failure to follow the established
procedure was unreasonable
in the circumstances, but the resultant
delay – which was by no means inordinate - has not occasioned
material prejudice
to the other parties. Unsurprisingly in the
circumstances, there was no opposition to condonation being granted.
It also counted
in the appellant’s favour that his appeal
appeared to us to have merit, and that it would therefore be in the
interests of
justice for it to be entertained despite the delay. An
order condoning the appellant’s non-compliance with the
prescribed
time limit will therefore be granted.
[12]
We turn then to deal with the merits of the appeal.
[13]
On 17 November 2021, the Body Corporate resolved to increase the levy
raised on the exclusive
use balcony areas from R3 to R23 per square
metre. The increase was ostensibly to defray the cost of insurance,
maintenance and
other expenses and to make provision towards the
scheme’s 10-year maintenance plan. It was further resolved that
the increase
would operate retrospectively.
[14]
The appellant lodged a dispute with the second respondent, and sought
orders in terms of
s 39(1)(c) of the CSOS Act in the subsequent
adjudication process (i) declaring that the contribution levied
on the exclusive
use balcony use owners had been incorrectly
determined in conflict with s 3(1)(c) of the Sectional Titles
Schemes Management
Act 8 of 2011 (“the STSMA”),
(ii) directing that the contribution be adjusted to the correct
or a reasonable
amount; and (iii) further, in terms of s
39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act, directing that all amounts paid by him in
excess of the
adjusted amount be credited to his levy account.
[15]
Section 3(1)(c) of the STSMA provides as follows:
‘
3.
Functions of bodies corporate.-
(1)
A body corporate must perform the functions entrusted to it by
or under this Act or the rules, as such functions include-
(c)
to require the owners, whenever necessary, to make contributions to
such funds: Provided that
the body corporate must require the owners
of sections entitled to the exclusive use of a part or parts of the
common property,
whether or not such right is registered or conferred
by rules, to make such additional contribution to the funds as is
estimated
necessary to defray the costs of rates and taxes, insurance
and maintenance in respect of any such part or parts, including the
provision of electricity and water,
unless in terms of the rules
the owners concerned are responsible for such costs.’
(Emphasis
supplied.)
[16]
Simply
said, s 3(1)(c) of the STSMA requires the body corporate to make a
policy decision: either the body corporate maintains the
exclusive
use areas itself and collects the costs of doing so from the owners
of the areas, or the trustees amend the conduct rules
and make the
maintenance (and the costs thereof) the responsibility of the owners
(without the need for a contribution towards
maintenance).
[4]
[17]
In this matter, the Body Corporate adopted a conduct rule (Rule
24(4)(a)), which recorded
as follows:
‘
4.
An owner to whom an exclusive use right has been allocated shall:
(a)
Maintain and repair that area as if it were part of
his/her/its section and keep it clean and tidy.’
It
made the unit holders who had the enjoyment of exclusive use
balconies responsible for the maintenance and repair of those areas.
Accordingly, the Body Corporate was prohibited by the proviso to
s 3(1)(c) of the STSMA from levying a contribution to defray
the
cost of maintaining such areas.
[18]
The Adjudicator erred by failing to recognise the effect of the
proviso to s 3(1)(c)
read with the forementioned Rule 24(4)(a)
on the determination of the impugned contribution.
[19]
The impugned contribution was incorrectly determined by virtue of its
conflict with the
statutory injunction in s 3(1)(c) of the
STSMA. In the circumstances, it is incumbent on the trustees of the
Body Corporate
to procure an adjustment
of
the contribution so levied with retrospective effect so as to bring
it into compliance with s 3(1)(c) of the Act by excluding
from
the computation of the levied contribution any provision for the
defrayment of any costs for which the said owners are directly
responsible in terms of the rules of the scheme. It was not for the
Adjudicator, nor is it for the court to determine what the
adjusted
contribution should be. It would therefore be inappropriate for us to
accede to the appellant’s prayer for the court
to direct that
the impugned contribution should revert to R3.00 per square metre.
The adjustment may be to any rate that the Body
Corporate reasonably
estimates is necessary to defray the costs for which the owners who
have balconied exclusive use areas are
not individually liable in
terms of the forementioned Rule 24(4)(a).
[20]
In the result, an order is made in the following terms:
1.
Condonation is granted for the late lodgement of the
appeal.
2.
The appeal is
upheld, with no order as to costs.
3.
The order of
the third respondent is set aside and replaced with an order in the
following terms:
(a)
It is declared
that the contribution of R23 per square metre levied on owners in
respect of balconies that are exclusive use areas,
in terms of the
resolution determined at the annual general meeting of the Ocean View
Body Corporate on 17 November 2021 on the
basis of an estimate of a
necessary provision to defray the necessary costs of rates and taxes,
insurance and maintenance in respect
of such areas, was incorrectly
determined, in contravention of 3(1)(c) of the Sectional Titles
Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011
(‘the Act’).
(b)
The trustees
of the third respondent are directed to procure the adjustment of the
contribution so levied with retrospective effect
so as to bring it
into compliance with s 3(1)(c) of the Act by excluding from the
computation of the levied contribution any
provision for the
defrayment of any costs for which the said owners are directly
responsible in terms of the rules of the scheme
(as defined in s 1
of the Act).
(c)
The trustees
are afforded 56 calendar days from the date of this order within
which to comply with the direction in paragraph (b)
hereof.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the High Court
A.
DE WET
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Appellant’s
counsel: DM
Roberts
Appellant’s
attorneys: STBB
Cape
Town
First
respondent’s attorneys: Bicarri Bollo Mariano Inc.
Cape
Town
[1]
Section
57(1) of the CSOS Act provides that:
‘
Right
of Appeal
57.1
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.’
[2]
‘
The
30-day provision has obviously been inserted to avoid delay in the
establishment of an accurate register. But it is axiomatic
that a
time limit that is extendable will not automatically be extended,
rather only where sufficient cause for condonation has
been made
out. Consequently, extension would not be in conflict with the
intention that expedition of the administrative operation
of the
statute should not be hindered
’.
(Our translation.)
[3]
See
Durdoc
Centre body Corporate v Singh
[2019]
ZAKZPHC 29 (13 May
2019); 2019 (6) SA 45
(KZP) and
Ellis
v Trustees of Palm Grove Body Corporate and Others
[2021] ZAKZPHC 97 (7 December 2021) in regard to the procedure
applied in the KwaZulu-Natal Division.
[4]
See C G van der Merwe
,
Sectional Titles, Shareblocks and Time Sharing
(looseleaf)
para 11.5.4.5 at footnote 297.
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