Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 40South Africa
Club Kerkira (Pty) Limited v Trustees of Club Kerkira Body Corporate and Others (D11451/2021) [2024] ZAKZDHC 40; 2025 (3) SA 488 (KZD) (4 June 2024)
Headnotes
by the appellant. It originally held all of them, but over the years sold some to third parties.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAKZDHC 40
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Club Kerkira (Pty) Limited v Trustees of Club Kerkira Body Corporate and Others (D11451/2021) [2024] ZAKZDHC 40; 2025 (3) SA 488 (KZD) (4 June 2024)
Club Kerkira (Pty) Limited v Trustees of Club Kerkira Body Corporate and Others (D11451/2021) [2024] ZAKZDHC 40; 2025 (3) SA 488 (KZD) (4 June 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAKZDHC/Data/2024_40.html
sino date 4 June 2024
FLYNOTES:
PROPERTY
– Community schemes –
CSOS
–
Adjudicator
delegating authority to auditor – Appointed to determine
amounts owed – Auditor not duly appointed
adjudicator –
Most important issues in the dispute were left to auditor –
Act afforded no power to adjudicator
to delegate her function –
Order may include ancillary and ensuing provisions as the
adjudicator considers necessary
or appropriate – This does
not include delegation of adjudicator’s decision-making
powers to third party –
Community Schemes Ombud Service Act
9 of 2011, s 21(2)(b).
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION: DURBAN
CASE NO: D11451/2021
In the matter between:
CLUB KERKIRA (PTY)
LIMITED
APPLICANT
and
TRUSTEES OF CLUB
KERKIRA BODY CORPORATE
FIRST RESPONDENT
COMMUNITY SCHEMES
OMBUD SERVICES
ADJUDICATOR, THANDEKA
QWABE N.O.
SECOND RESPONDENT
COMMUNITY SCHEMES
OMBUD SERVICES
THIRD RESPONDENT
ORDER
The following order is
granted: -
1,
(a) The application for
condonation of the
late lodgement of this appeal
is granted.
(b)
The costs of the application for
condonation shall be paid by the appellant.
2.
(a) The appeal is upheld.
(b)
The adjudication order of 26 January 2021, read with the auditor’s
report of 28 August
2021, is set aside.
(a)
The adjudication proceedings are
remitted to the Community Schemes Ombud Service for further
consideration and a decision in terms
of the Community Schemes Ombud
Service
Act,
2011.
(b)
Each of the appellant and first
respondent shall pay its own costs
of the appeal.
JUDGMENT
OLSEN J
[1]
This is an appeal in terms of s 57 of the Community Schemes Ombud
Service Act, 9 of
2011 (the “Ombud Service Act”).
The course of events which led the parties to this court on appeal
raised a number
of disparate issues all of which are in my view
subsidiary to a single one which determines the outcome of this
appeal.
[2]
The appellant is Club Kerkira (Pty) Limited. It was the
developer of a sectional
title scheme known as “Club Kerkira”.
The trustees of the Club Kerkira Body Corporate are cited as the
first
respondent. The appellant and the first respondent are
the protagonists in this appeal.
[3]
The second respondent is the Community Schemes Ombud Services
Adjudicator, Thandeka
Qwabe. The third respondent is the
Community Schemes Ombud Services, a juristic person established in
terms of s 3(1) of
the Ombud Service Act which, in terms of s 4 of
that Act, has the function of developing and providing a dispute
resolution service
as contemplated by the Act. The second and
third respondents abide the decision of this court.
[4]
It is the duty of the Chief Ombud to appoint full time and part time
adjudicators.
The second respondent is such an appointee, and
one must assume that her appointment was one contemplated by
sub-section 21(2)(b)
of the Ombud Service Act which requires the
appointment of adjudicators with
‘
(i)
suitable qualifications and experience necessary to adjudicate
disputes under the
supervision of an ombud or deputy-ombud; and
(ii)
suitable qualifications and experience in community scheme
governance”.
It is the third
respondent’s decision on the dispute between the first and
second respondents that is the subject of this
appeal.
[5]
A Mr CC Elsworth, a practising accountant and auditor who played a
prominent role
in the adjudication process, has not been cited as a
party to this litigation. I will get to how he came to be
involved later.
For the present it is sufficient to state that
he compiled a report in which he quantified the contributions which,
on his analysis,
were due to have been paid by the holders of rights
of extension in the Club Kerkira scheme, and in particular by the
appellant,
to the costs of running the scheme.
[6]
A short history of the affairs of the scheme will aid an
understanding of the dispute
submitted to the adjudication process.
The land on which the scheme is sited is situate in an area known as
Palm Beach on
the lower south coast of KwaZulu-Natal. As to the
origins of the development I cannot do better than quote from the
introduction
to the report made by Mr Elsworth.
‘
Club
Kerkira (Pty) Limited acquired a property situated at Palm Beach and
registered a sectional title plan in 1992. The scheme
is
registered as Club Kerkira SS No. 242/1992. The said plan
included 101 units to be developed in four phases. Since
registration of the plan sixteen units have been built and
transferred to owners. Club Kerkira (Pty) Limited has also
registered
a section which comprises of the original dwelling present
on the property but which is now in a state of disrepair. The
developer installed the majority of the services and roads throughout
the estate during the first phase of the development.
The
estate is set on 44 hectares of land, and the developer also
completed a tennis court, two swimming pools with amenities, an
administration office, a guardhouse, a workshop, a manager’s
dwelling, and a club house. Thus, the estate was prepared
for
the inhabitants of 101 units.
Club Kerkira (Pty)
Limited reserved the right to develop the balance of one hundred and
one units.”
[7]
The situation is now, as it has been for many years, that the first
respondent can
only raise levies (properly so-called) against 17
owners of sectional title units in order to service and maintain the
large estate
designed to accommodate, and enjoy the benefits of the
levies payable by, 101 sectional title unit holders. Thus the
importance
to the first respondent of whatever contributions to its
expenses it may lawfully claim from the holders of real rights of
extension
of the scheme. The majority of those real rights of
extension are held by the appellant. It originally held all of
them, but over the years sold some to third parties.
[8]
The first respondent raised claims against the appellant for payment
of such contributions
over the years. The appellant repudiated those
consistently, to the extent that they exceeded what the appellant
claimed was to
be the limit of its liability in terms of a
certificate issued in terms of s 25(2)(a) of the Sectional Titles
Act, 95 of 1986 (the
“
Sectional Titles Act&rdquo
;). The
section ceased to be the provision governing contributions payable by
holders of rights of extension when it was amended
in 2010.
There is no need for me to furnish an account of the provisions of
the certificate in terms of
s 25
applicable to this development, as
the contention that the appellant’s obligations continued to be
restricted by that certificate
after 2010 was no longer pursued in
the adjudication process, and has not been pursued in this appeal.
It suffices to observe
that in terms of the certificate the claims to
contributions which may be made by the body corporate against the
holders of rights
of extension are very much restricted to the
obvious advantage of such holders.
[9]
In August 2019 the first respondent submitted an application under
the Ombud Service
Act for the resolution of the dispute relating to
the appellant’s liability for contributions to the expenses
incurred in
maintaining the estate. The first respondent asked
for a determination as to the legislation applicable to the
calculation
of the contributions of a holder of rights of extension,
an order that notwithstanding our law relating to the prescription of
debts the first respondent was entitled to enforce claims from 2010
onwards, a specific award for payment of R798 307,79 as contributions
payable from 17 July 2016 to 30 June 2019 together with interest
thereon, and an order that the appellant was liable to pay a monthly
contribution to the first respondent of R84 142 from 1 July 2019
until the next annual general meeting of the first respondent,
when
the amount payable thereafter would be determined. At some
stage (it is not clear on the papers when) the first respondent
conceded that part of its claim had prescribed and, judging by their
conduct at least, the parties agreed that the first respondent’s
claims from 2016 onwards were justiciable.
[10]
In the circumstances the second respondent was called upon to decide
whether the monetary claims
made by the first respondent had been
calculated in compliance with s 3(1)(d) of the Sectional Titles
Schemes Management Act, 8
of 2011 (the “Management Act”).
The provision reads as follows.
‘
...
Functions of Body Corporate
(1)
A Body Corporate must perform the
functions entrusted to it by or under this Act or Rules, and such
functions include –
…
(d)
to require from a developer who is entitled to extend the scheme in
terms of a right reserved
in
s 25(1)
of the
Sectional Titles Act, to
make such reasonable additional contribution to the funds as may be
necessary to defray the costs of rates and taxes, insurance
and
maintenance of the part or parts of the common property affected by
the reservation, including a contribution for the provision
of
electricity and water and other expenses and costs in respect of and
attributable to the relevant part or parts.’
[11]
The appellant’s response to the claims placed before the
adjudicator can in my view only
be described as obstructive. In
my view the third respondent’s decision, evident in her
adjudication decision dated
26 January 2021, to ignore the detritus
generated by the appellant’s approach to the dispute was
commendable. The third
respondent correctly concluded that the
appellant’s argument concerning the first respondent’s
money claims amounted
to this.
(a)
The first respondent had failed to
prove that it had undertaken any of the work alleged to generate the
money claims.
(b)
The first respondent had failed to
establish its case on the quantification of those claims.
(c)
Given that s 3(1)(d) of the
Management Act empowered the first respondent to require a developer
to make contributions “necessary
to defray” the costs,
the costs had to be incurred before any contributions could be
claimed.
[12]
In my view the third respondent correctly concluded that the
contributions payable by the holders
of rights of extension had to be
the subject of the ordinary budgeting process followed in respect of
levies payable by sectional
title owners, and claimable and therefore
payable on a monthly basis. The appellant’s contention
that the first respondent
had to establish that it had incurred the
expenditures making up especially its money claim for the period 2016
to 2019 carries
with it the implication that the body corporate must
incur liabilities not covered by its purse; or, on the other hand, an
implication
that the levies raised against sectional title owners
under s 3(1)(a) of the Management Act must include anticipated
expenditures
falling within s 3(1)(d) of the Management Act in the
hope or expectation that such would be recovered from the holders of
rights
of extension. This latter proposition can be rejected on
the language of the Act. What s 3(1)(d) obliges a body
corporate to do is to secure from such holders an “additional”
contribution. Clearly what was contemplated is
a contribution
in addition to the ordinary levies payable under s 3(1)(a) by the
owners of sectional title units. As to the
former implication,
it is inconsistent with the scheme of s 3 of the Management Act, and
especially ss 3(1)(a) to (c), that a scheme
should run on credit.
[13]
The appellant’s argument built around the use of the word
“defray” rests on
a very narrow and incorrect meaning of
the word. However, even accepting the meaning adopted by the
appellant, the argument
overlooks the fact that on its proper
construction, s 3(1) (d) involves the contribution of monies by
holders of rights of extension
being available to defray expenditure
when it is incurred. The narrow meaning the appellant
attributed to the word “defray”
does not imply that the
expenditures had to have been incurred before a monetary contribution
to them could be claimed.
[14]
Unfortunately, having reached the conclusions just discussed, the
third respondent fell into
error in one respect certainly, and
perhaps in a second respect. As to the second respect,
the position was that the
task which remained to be done was
adjudication on the question as to whether the claims to
contributions from the appellant made
by the first respondent were
reasonable when it was resolved to make them. If they were they
had to be paid, irrespective
of whether the expenses were actually
incurred after the claims were made. As far as I can see the
order and direction given
by the third respondent can be interpreted
to convey a different thing, that is to say that what was required
was an assessment
of the costs actually incurred during the period in
question, and likely to be incurred during the year after June,
2019.
[15]
The adjudication order read as follows.
’
34.1
An auditor from the Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors (IRBA)
must be appointed within 30 days of delivery
of this order to peruse
the financial statements for the period 2016 to 2019 and ascertain
the costs incurred by the body corporate
for the costs listed under s
3(1)(d) of the STSMA in relation to the common property.
34.2
The amount determined by the auditor must be apportioned accordingly
to what the respondent owes for the
period claimed and what the
monthly contribution will be until the next annual general meeting.
34.3
The auditor’s findings in respect of amounts owed including
interest must be paid by the respondent.’
[16]
In making this order the third respondent purported to delegate her
authority as an adjudicator
to a third party who was not a duly
appointed adjudicator. The most important issues in the dispute
between the parties were left
to the proposed auditor. The
Ombud Service Act afforded no power to the third respondent to
delegate her function.
She fell into an error of law in this
regard. The only argument advanced by the first respondent
before me against this conclusion
rests on s 54(3) of the Ombud
Service Act which reads as follows.
‘
The
order may contain such ancillary and ensuing provisions as the
adjudicator considers necessary or appropriate.’
There is no merit in that
argument. Firstly, it is contrary to the scheme of the Ombud
Service Act that any such “ancillary
and ensuing”
provision includes the delegation of the adjudicator’s
decision-making powers to a third party. In any
event, the
construction favoured by the first respondent is contradicted by s
54(1)(a) of the Ombud Service Act which provides
that if an
application is not dismissed the adjudicator must make an order
granting or refusing each part of the relief sought
by the
applicant. The crucial parts of the orders sought by the first
respondent (as applicant before the adjudicator) were
the monetary
awards. Section 54(3) of the Ombud Service Act supposes the
addition of “ancillary and ensuing”
provisions once there
has been compliance with s 54(1).
[17]
Neither the appellant nor the first respondent raised any objection
to the third respondent’s
decision that what must be paid must
be an amount determined by an auditor. In the result Mr
Elsworth was appointed the task.
[18]
I do not propose to go into Mr Elsworth’s work in any detail.
There is no doubt at
all that he applied himself fully to the task,
considering the provisions of the applicable legislation as well as
the data available
in the financial documents of the body corporate.
As already noted, he was not joined in these proceedings and would
therefore
not have been able to defend his decisions and reasoning if
in this case the issue was alleged errors in his work. The
matter
came to him late, after the adjudication process had been
delayed, I understand, because of the pandemic. Mr Elsworth
thought
that in the circumstances he should bring his work up to date
given that his decision was only made on 20 August 2021. He
concluded that as at August 2021 the appellant owed the first
respondent contributions and interest thereon in an amount of R4
604
466. More importantly, the component of this assessment
(excluding interest) which coincides with the period in respect
of
which the first respondent had made a claim before the adjudicator
for payment of the sum of R798 000, amounted to some R2,2
million.
On Mr Elsworth’s report one concludes that the first respondent
had been very conservative when quantifying
its claims for
contributions from the appellant for the period 2016 to 2019.
[19]
The adjudication order which had been made by the third respondent
obliged the appellant to pay
the amounts determined by Mr
Elsworth. When asked how such an order could be permitted to
stand counsel for the first
respondent argued that as the appellant
had acquiesced in the process which transferred the decision making
power to Mr Elsworth,
the first respondent should not be prejudiced
by the fact that the body corporate was deprived of an opportunity to
amend its claim
upwards to the true and very much higher quantum
which would have been revealed during the quantification of the claim
in the ordinary
course of proceedings before the adjudicator
herself. In my view that argument cannot prevail for a number
of reasons, the
principle one being that the first respondent’s
claim was for contributions which it had raised, no more and no
less.
An application for an increase in its claim would
properly have been refused upon the basis that the first respondent
had no right
to increase the claimed contribution
ex post facto
,
beyond the amounts fixed and determined by the budgetary process
followed in each of the three years to which the claim of some
R798
000 relates.
[20]
Section 57(2) of the Ombud Service Act provides that an appeal such
as the present one (ie on
a question of law contemplated by s 57(1))
“must be lodged within 30 days after the date of delivery of
the order of the
adjudicator”. The appellant delivered a
notice of appeal on 5 or 6 October 2021, some eight months after the
adjudicator’s
order was made, and a little over 40 days after
Mr Elsworth’s decision was received by the appellant.
About eight months
later, on 15 June 2023 the appellant delivered a
notice of motion and founding affidavit, thereby relaunching its
appeal.
The explanation tendered for this peculiar method of
launching proceedings turned on the contention that there was
confusion generated
by conflicting decisions on how properly to
launch such an appeal. I am not satisfied with the explanation.
On any basis
the appeal was launched out of time. The appellant
asks that its failure to launch its appeal within the time limit set
by
s 57(2) of the Ombud Service Act be condoned and the appeal
considered. The first respondent opposed the application for
condonation upon the basis that this court has no power in effect to
extend the statutory period for the launching of the appeal,
and on
the further basis that if the court does have such power this is not
an occasion for the exercise of it.
[21]
There are two propositions which have a bearing on the application
for condonation about which
there is no dispute between the parties.
(a)
Firstly, it is clear that the Ombud
Service Act is designed to provide an at least relatively inexpensive
and speedy resolution
of disputes arrising within community
living schemes. The confinement of appeal rights to questions
of law, and the
fixing of a time limit on the institution of such
appeals reflect the same philosophy.
(b)
The High Court has no inherent
jurisdiction to condone non-compliance with statutory provisions.
The power to do so must be
conferred upon the High Court. (See
Mohlomi v Minister
of Defence
[1996] ZACC 20
;
1997 (1)
SA 124
(CC) para 17.)
[22]
The question as to whether the Ombud Service Act impliedly confers a
power on the High Court
to condone the late lodgement of an appeal
was considered by a Full Bench in
Baxer v Oceanview Body Corporate
and Others
2023 (2) SA 205
(WCC). The court (at paragraph
5) drew attention to the fact that an express provision in the
statute is not required to
confer a power of condonation on the
court. The question as to whether the conferral of such a power
is implied turns upon
a proper construction of the statutory
provision. With reference to
Phillips v Direkteur vir Sensus
1959 (3) SA 370
(A) the court in
Baxter
decided that the 30
day time limit for the lodgement of an appeal was not intended to be
an expiry period with the implication that
if the relevant right was
not exercised within the prescribed time it would
ipso facto
be extinguished. It held that the provisions of the Act should
not be read in a way which limits the proper ventilation of
disputes
of the type requiring adjudication under the Act. The
conclusion was that the court does have the power to condone
non-compliance on good cause shown. The parties were given the
right to submit brief written argument after the hearing of
this
appeal on the question as to whether I am bound by the Full Bench
decision of the Western Cape Court in
Baxter
to accept that
this court does have the power to condone the late delivery of the
appeal in this case. The answer to the
question as to whether I
am bound does not seem perfectly clear and I have decided that there
is no need for me to go any further
into the subject. In my
view
Baxter
was correctly decided. Appeals against
decisions of adjudicators are confined to questions of law.
Under our Constitution
the determination of disputes over questions
of law are the preserve of the courts. Errors of law made by
adjudicators result
in decisions which are not in accordance with
law. The legislation recognises that such decisions should not
be allowed to
prevail and therefore provides for appeals. It is
self-evident that some decisions which might be made by adjudicators
will
have long-term effects which may indefinitely dictate the course
of the relationship between members of community schemes in a manner
which is not consistent with the law. That would be an
undesirable outcome inconsistent with the purpose of the Act.
In the circumstances, whilst the requirement that such appeals must
be lodged within 30 days is understandable, it is equally
understandable that if there should be default in that regard, and
the circumstances of the case warrant it, the court should have
the
power to condone the delay so that the relationships sought to be
protected by the Ombud Service Act are conducted in accordance
with
law.
[23]
Counsel for the appellant has argued that the test for condonation
revolves around the interests
of justice, and that the following are
the main factors to be considered.
(a)
The nature of the relief sought.
(b)
The extent of the delay.
(c)
The effect of the delay on the
administration of justice and other litigants.
(d)
The reasonableness of the explanation
for the delay.
(e)
The importance of the issues to be
raised in the intended appeal.
(f)
The prospects of success.
[24] I
should state immediately that I am quite unimpressed by the
appellant’s explanation for the delay,
especially given the
duration of it, and by its failure to raise its objection to the
course followed by the second respondent
in delegating powers to an
auditor. At least since 2010 the appellant has adopted an
obstructive course designed to avoid
its financial responsibilities
as the holder of rights of extension. On the papers before the
adjudicator and before this
court in the appeal this has placed the
17 sectional title holders in a precarious position. The manner
in which the appellant
has run this appeal is consistent with that
prior conduct. The founding affidavit runs to 30 pages and 100
paragraphs.
The unpaginated heads of argument run to 196
paragraphs. Most of the material has the hallmarks of an
exercise in obfuscation.
The only point made in the appellant’s
documents which legitimately addresses the issues in this appeal is
the one, repeated
more than once in the papers, that the adjudicator
erred in law by purporting to delegate to Mr Elsworth the power to
determine
the amount of money owed by the appellant to the first
respondent.
[25]
All this notwithstanding, the interests of justice must prevail.
Condonation must be granted because
of the level of prejudice
suffered by the appellant, confronted as it is with an adjudication
order for payment of money far in
excess of the claim which the
appellant was called upon to answer. If indeed Mr Elsworth’s
assessment of the claim
is wrong (a subject on which I express no
view for obvious reasons), it holds the potential detrimentally to
affect future financial
relations between the body corporate and the
appellant.
[26] In
my view although the appeal must succeed, this is not a case in which
costs should follow the result.
My reasons for that conclusion
will be evident from what I have already said concerning the
appellant’s conduct prior to
and in the course of the
adjudication process and, indeed, in this appeal.
I make the following
order.
1,
(a) The application for
condonation of the
late lodgement of this appeal
is granted.
(c)
The costs of the application for
condonation shall be paid by the appellant.
2.
(a) The appeal is upheld.
(b)
The adjudication order of 26 January 2021, read with the auditor’s
report of 28 August
2021, is set aside.
(c)
The adjudication proceedings are
remitted to the Community Schemes Ombud Service for further
consideration and a decision in terms
of the
Community Schemes Ombud Service
Act, 2011.
(d)
Each of the appellant and first
respondent shall pay its own costs of the appeal.
OLSEN J
Date of Hearing:
Friday, 09 February
2024
Date
of Judgment:
Tuesday,
4
th
June 2024
For
the Appellant:
Adv
DC Johnson
Instructed
by:
Maryke
Prinsloo Attorney
Applicant’s
Attorney
Suite
801, 8
th
Floor,
Esplanade Garage
127
Margaret Mncadi Avenue
Durban
(Ref:
Club Kerkira)
(Tel:
031 – 903 4780)
Email:
maryke@marykelaw.co.za
For
the 1
st
Respondent:
Mr M
Bingham
Instructed
by:
CGS
Attorneys
First
Respondent’s Attorneys
1
st
Floor, Pharos House
70
Buckingham Terrace
Westville
Durban
(Ref:
CHG Salmon/MAT5881)
(Tel:
031 – 003 5148
Email:
chris@cgsattorneys.co.za
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Talksure Trading (Pty) Ltd v Naidoo and Another (D4630/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 50 (28 July 2023)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 50High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)97% similar
Renian Distributors (Pty) Ltd v Crown Footwear (Pty) Ltd and Another (3898/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 4 (1 February 2024)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 4High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)97% similar
E.Sat (Pty) Limited and Others v Lucken N.O and Others (D7737/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 18; 2024 (2) SACR 377 (KZD) (3 May 2024)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 18High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)97% similar
Educor Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Bowwood and Main 131 (RF) (Pty) Ltd and Others (2025-205747) [2025] ZAKZDHC 76 (24 November 2025)
[2025] ZAKZDHC 76High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)97% similar
RGS Group Holdings Limited v Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue) and Others (D13702/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 8 (18 February 2025)
[2025] ZAKZDHC 8High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)97% similar