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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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[2023] ZAKZDHC 39
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## Body Corporate of San Sydney v Singh and Others (D10058/2018)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 39 (23 June 2023)
Body Corporate of San Sydney v Singh and Others (D10058/2018)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 39 (23 June 2023)
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sino date 23 June 2023
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE NO:
D10058/2018
In the matter between:
THE
BODY CORPORATE OF SAN SYDNEY
Applicant
and
SHIVANI
SINGH
First Respondent
ZAMAPHEMBA
NTULI
Second Respondent
FIRSTRAND
BANK
LTD
Third Respondent
NEDBANK
LTD
Fourth Respondent
SB
GUARANTEE COMPANY (RF) PTY LTD
Fifth Respondent
ABSA
HOME LOANS 101 (RF)
LTD
Sixth Respondent
CHANGING
TIDES 17 (PTY) LTD N.O.
Seventh Respondent
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
## Summary
Summary
1.
This case concerns the interpretation and
application of sections 25(6) and 17 of the Section Titles Act 95 of
1986 (“STA”),
read with sections 5(1)(a) and (b) of the
Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011(“STSMA”).
2.
The applicant instituted this application
during August 2018.
When
the matter was argued before me, as an opposed motion, only the first
respondent opposed the application and the applicant
limited the
relief that it sought to the first respondent.
I will refer to the first respondent simply
as “the respondent.”
3.
After hearing argument, I requested counsel
to provide further submissions to me on the applicability of the
decision of Satchwell
J in
Torgos (Pty)
Ltd v Body Corporate of Anchors Aweigh and Another
[2005] ZAGPHC 123
;
2006
(3) SA 369
(W), which I had come upon in my research.
They did so and I am grateful to counsel
and to their instructing attorneys for those further arguments.
4.
The applicant has approached this Court to
declare that the respondent has no “good cause in law” to
refuse to consent
to it exercising and ceding certain rights to
extend the sectional scheme, in which the respondent is a property
owner.
If the
applicant is correct in its arguments, then it seeks orders declaring
so and it seeks certain consequential orders directing
or securing
the respondent’s consent.
Although
the affidavits in the application are voluminous, with layers of
factual detail, the basic facts are common cause between
the parties
(save for their respective interpretation of the legal effect of
those facts).
## Sectional Ownership
Sectional Ownership
5.
The applicant is a body corporate and was
established in terms of section 36(1) of the STA.
It administers the development scheme known
and registered as the San Sydney scheme in terms of the STA and the
STSMA.
The
respondent is the registered owner of Unit 2 in the San Sydney scheme
and is therefore a member of the applicant.
6.
The STA provides a legal framework for
sectional ownership.
The
Supreme
Court of
Appeal has described this as follows:
“
Sectional
title ownership consists of three elements, namely individual
ownership of a section, joint ownership of the common parts
of the
sectional title scheme and membership of a body corporate.
The
registered title-holder of a unit is the owner of the section, joint
owner of the common parts of the scheme and a member of
the body
corporate.
Thus,
a person, buying into a sectional title scheme, enters into a series
of interlocking relationships.
The
[STA] introduced several new concepts into our law.
By
providing for the division of land and buildings comprising a
development scheme into sections and common property, it created
an
entirely new composite
res
,
called a unit, which consists of a section and an undivided share in
the common property. The section is considered the principal
component, with the undivided share in the land and other common
property inextricably linked thereto as an accessory.
The
Act [STA] also created an entirely new form of composite ownership,
namely separate ownership of a section coupled with joint
ownership
of the common property.
Sectional
owners own the common property collectively in undivided shares in
accordance with the provisions of the Act.”
[1]
7.
In
that
context bodies corporate
such
as the applicant are
given
functions
in section
3
and
powers
in
section
4.
The
general
import
of
these
powers
and
functions is that a body corporate such as the applicant, is required
to administer and manage the scheme and manage the common
property in
the interests of its members.
[2]
Bodies
corporate act through their trustees and their roles and
responsibilities are regulated by sections 6 and 7 of the STSMA.
[3]
8.
Bodies corporate also have “additional
powers” and these are regulated through section 5 of the STSMA.
9.
These matters are also regulated by:
(a)
Part
II
of
the
STA
which
deals with
“development
schemes,
sectional plans and sectional title
registers” in sections 4 to 14;
(b)
Part III of the STA which deals with
“registration and common property,” in sections 15 to 19;
and
(c)
Part
IV
of
the
STA
which
deals
with
“subdivision,
consolidation
and
extension of sections,” in sections 20-24.
10.
Part V of the STA deals with the “extension
of schemes.”
In
summary, it enables a developer, when applying to register a
sectional plan, to reserve in a condition, the right to extend the
scheme over common property (section 25(1)).
That right must be exercised within the
period stipulated or it lapses and vests in the body corporate.
11.
Section 25(6) provides:
“
If
no reservation was made by a developer in terms of subsection (1), or
if such a reservation was made and for any reason has lapsed,
the
right to extend a scheme including land contemplated in section 26,
shall vest in the body corporate which shall be entitled,
subject to
this section, section 5(1)(b) of the Sectional Titles Scheme
Management Act and after compliance, with the necessary
changes, with
the requirements of paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (d) and (g) of
subsection (2), to obtain a certificate of real right
in the
prescribed form in respect thereof: Provided that the body corporate
shall only exercise, alienate or transfer such right
with the written
consent of all the members of the body corporate, the mortgagees of
the units and real rights over the units,
and the holders of
registered real rights over the units in the scheme and who shall not
withhold such consent without good cause
in law.”
12.
Section 25(6) was considered and applied in
SP and Catering Investments (Pty) Ltd v
Body Corporate of Waterfront Mews and Others
2010
(4) SA 104
(SCA), where the content of the right in section 25(1),
reserved by a developer to extend the scheme, was explained as
follows,
at paragraph 9:
“…
The
right is one which the developer has reserved for the period
expressly stipulated in his application.
It
is a right to construct the additional buildings, or extend the
existing ones, on the common property, to divide them into sections
and to confer rights of exclusive use in respect of them.
That
is the content of the right.
It
is to be distinguished from the obligation to perform the work which
is defined in s 25(13).”
[4]
13.
The import of section 25(6) is:
“…
[I]f
no right is reserved in terms of ss (1) at inception of the scheme or
if a right has been reserved but has lapsed, the right
to extend the
scheme will vest in the body corporate.”
[5]
14.
Within
this
context, the applicant asserts a
right
to
“exercise”
and “cede”
the right to extend the scheme, in terms of
section 25(6) of the STA.
The Facts and
Arguments
15.
It is common cause in this application that
the developer’s right to extend the scheme lapsed on or about
31 March 2013 and
that the right to extend the scheme vested
thereafter in the applicant.
16.
The
applicant contends that it is entitled to “exercise” and
“cede” the right to extend the scheme to a
third party,
HF Property Investments (Pty) Ltd (“HF Property”).
It
did so by concluding an agreement with HF Property on 11 May 2018
(“the agreement”).
[6]
17.
The
preamble
to
the
agreement
records
that
the
developer
[7]
had
constructed
units 9, 10 and 11, for which certificates of occupancy had been
issued by the local authority, and that the developer
had purportedly
sold these units to the present occupiers of those units.
The
preamble records that all of this occurred despite the fact that the
developer’s right to extend the scheme had lapsed,
with that
right vesting in the applicant from about 1 April 2013.
18.
The
preamble
describes
the
intentions
of
the
applicant
and
HF
Property
as
follows:
(a)
the applicant intends to extend the scheme
to enable units 9, 10 and 11 to be registered at the Deeds Registry
as sectional title
units in the San Sydney scheme; and
(b)
HF Property intends to purchase the right
“to take the necessary steps to register buildings 9, 10 and 11
as sectional title
units in the San Sydney scheme and to pass title
of such units.”
19.
Clause 2 of the agreement deals with the
applicant’s “sale of [the] real right to extend the
scheme.”
It provides:
“
2.1
The BC sells to HF Prop the right to
complete buildings 9, 10 and 11 on the common property and to divide
such buildings into sections
and the common property, for its
personal account, subject to the fulfilment of the suspensive
conditions below [in clause 3] and
on the terms and conditions
contained in this agreement (“the real right”).
2.2
HF Prop agrees and undertakes to complete
the buildings 9, 10 and 11 strictly in accordance with the building
plans already approved
by the local authority.
HF Prop acknowledges that any deviation
from such approved plans shall require the written consent of the
Trustees of the BC.
2.3
HF Prop shall procure the registration of
the sectional plans of extension in respect of buildings 9, 10 and 11
within one (1) year
of the date of fulfilment of all suspensive
conditions, failing with the right shall lapse and all rights to
extend the scheme
in terms of section 25 of the Act shall again vest
in the BC.”
20.
In terms of clause 3 the parties
acknowledged that “the exercising, alienation and/or cession by
the BC of a right of extension
of the scheme requires the written
consent of all owners in the scheme as well as the written consent of
the mortgagee of each
unit … provided that an owner or
mortgage may not withhold such approval without good cause in law.”
21.
The remainder of clause 3 deals with the
mechanics of how the applicant would secure the consent of the
owners, including by launching
this application, if necessary, within
90 days of the conclusion of the agreement, for an order that owners
did not have good cause
in law for withholding consent.
In addition, clause 3.5 records that “if
the application is initiated but the order is not granted, this
agreement will lapse
and have no further force and effect.”
22.
Clause 4 records that the purchase price of
the real right is R500,000.00, payable upon registration of the
cession of the real
right from the applicant to HF Property.
23.
Clause 6 of the agreement obliges HF
Property to offer ‘a right of first refusal’ to the
persons who had previously
concluded sale agreements with the
developer for the purchase of units 9, 10 and 11.
Maximum purchase prices are set for each of
units 9, 10 and 11 in amounts ranging between R1.5 and R2 million.
Clause 6 records
that if such units are not purchased by those
persons on those terms, then “HF Prop shall be entitled to
retain or transfer
ownership of each unit to be registered on terms
and conditions as it deems fit.”
24.
By the time this matter was heard, all the
owners of units in the San Sydney scheme had granted their consent to
the applicant to
‘sell’ the right of extension on the
terms contained in the agreement, except the respondent.
Those consents were obtained after the
conclusion of the agreement.
25.
In addition, Mr M E Stewart who appeared as
counsel for the applicant, advised the court that the provisional
liquidators of the
developer had sought to intervene in this
application but had since withdrawn that application.
The liquidators played no further role in
the application.
26.
The
founding affidavit sets out the factual bases upon which the
applicant claims relief.
The
applicant contends that the developer’s conduct in completing
the buildings on proposed units 9, 10 and 11, in obtaining
certificates of occupancy for those buildings and in selling such
‘units,’ took place after the developer’s right
of
extension had lapsed.
[8]
27.
The applicant contends that the trustees of
the body corporate had monitored the proceedings for the winding up
of the developer,
since the provisional liquidation
order granted
on
9
February
2016,
but
that it
appeared
that
those
proceedings had not been finalised.
28.
Approximately two years later, the
applicant sought legal advice about the legal status of units 9, 10
and 11.
The
upshot of that advice was that the applicant was the only party “able
to take steps to procure the registration of sections
9, 10 and 11 at
the Deeds office” because the right to extend the scheme vested
in it pursuant to section 25(6) of the STA.
29.
Based on this and related advice, the
applicant’s trustees considered that they had the following
options: to accept the three
buildings as part of the common property
and to rent them out, or to exercise its vested right to extend the
scheme or to cede
that right to a third party to register units 9, 10
and 11.
30.
The founding affidavit records that “a
critical factor in the decision to be made was that the Board had a
prospective purchaser
of the right to extend the scheme, being Mr
Dean Hodgson, the sole director of HF Property.
In addition, HF Property “was
prepared to acquire the real right to extend the scheme by the
addition of sections 9, 10 and
11,” would remedy certain
waterproofing defects on those units without expense to the applicant
and it was prepared to sell
to the present occupiers of those units,
in line with the prices that they had agreed to pay the developer,
which meant that those
occupiers would be able to obtain title to
those units.
31.
The applicant’s trustees considered
these options and decided against renting out the three units which
had been built on
common property.
It
decided against being a landlord and being responsible for the repair
and maintenance of those three buildings.
32.
The trustees decided to exercise and cede
the applicant’s right to extend the scheme, which would mean
that:
(a)
the applicant would be able to fulfil the
‘moral obligation’ that each Trustee believed it owed to
those purchasers
(of units 9, 10 and 11), to enable them to acquire
ownership of their sections;
(b)
the cash injection from HF Property would
benefit the applicant’s reserve fund which would assist reduce
the financial obligations
of its members;
(c)
the applicant would not have to remedy and
pay for the waterproofing defects in those three units; and
(d)
the applicant would be able to achieve all
of this with “little to no financial cost to it.”
33.
Paragraph 32 of the founding affidavit
records:
“
The
Applicant’s Board of Trustees was unanimous in its decision to
procure the exercise and cession of its vested right to
extend the
scheme to HF Prop.
An
agreement was consequently negotiated and concluded between the
Applicant and HF Prop…”.
34.
The founding affidavit describes the
attempts made by the applicant’s attorneys to secure consents
from the members of the
applicant, as is required in terms of section
5(1)(b) of the STSMA.
35.
The remainder of the founding affidavit
details efforts made by the applicant, through its attorneys, to
persuade the respondent
to provide her written consent,
as contemplated in
section 5(1)(b) of the STSMA, without any success.
36.
One such written communication was sent to
the respondent on 30 May 2018 explaining the applicant’s
decision and motivating
for her consent.
That letter recorded that the Trustees were
of the view that extending the scheme to include units 9,10 and 11
would impose onerous
obligations on the applicant, requiring it to
step into the shoes of the developer, when this could be avoided by
transferring
that right to a new developer.
That letter also recorded:
“
Fortunately,
the Board of Trustees has already secured a new developer who is
prepared to pay the Body Corporate R500, 000.00 for
that right [the
right to extend the scheme] and to carry all the costs involved.
That new developer will only be able to
register the existing three buildings - it will not be able to extend
the scheme any further
or make any other changes to the scheme.
The effective outcome of this action will
be that the three homes are registered as sectional title units, the
Body Corporate will
receive R500 000.00 and will also soon start
receiving levies in respect of those three homes.”
37.
The
letter also gave the respondent notice that owners could not refuse
to consent without good cause and stated that an application
would be
made to court, if required, for a Judge to determine “whether
the reason for refusing consent was lawful or not.”
[9]
38.
That letter was eventually responded to by
the applicant, through her attorneys, who asked for information about
the liquidation
of the developer, details about when units 9,10 and
11 had been constructed, when they became occupied, copies of the
agreements
of sale concluded in respect of those properties and
whether payments had been made to any party in respect of those
units.
39.
The applicant’s attorneys responded
with some of the information but could not provide any information
about the sale of units
9, 10 and 11 and payments in respect of those
units, stating that this was because the applicant was not party to
those agreements.
The
respondent was advised to seek that information from the parties to
those (sale) agreements.
40.
In the end, the applicant brought this
application when the respondent did not provide her consent.
41.
The applicant’s founding affidavit
alleges that the respondent has not “bothered to provide any
explanation for not
having consented” and it concludes that
this can only be because she does not have good cause in law for
withholding the
approval required in terms of section 5(1)(b) of the
STSMA.
42.
The respondent contends that she has good
cause in law to withhold her consent.
The
primary contention raised on the papers and in argument by the
respondent’s counsel Mr B Skinner SC, is that the agreement
with HF Property is “anything but” just the cession of
the applicant’s right to extend the scheme because it
also
permits the sale of common property.
43.
The respondent argues that the buildings on
units 9, 10 and 11 have been erected on common property and that
these are being sold
to HF Property, for less than they are worth.
44.
The respondent contends that these matters
ought to have been determined by members through a “unanimous
resolution”
required in terms of section 5(1)(a) of the STSMA.
45.
On the papers, the respondent effectively
contends that the agreement is not an arms-length transaction because
units 9,10 and 11
were purchased by the mother of the sole director
of HF Property.
The
properties were ‘on-sold’ thereafter.
46.
The respondent asserts that she cannot
remember any of these issues being brought to the attention of or
debated by members at a
meeting.
She
argues that these matters ought to have been put before the owners,
with all material information, for them to consider and
decide how
best to deal with matters, which ought to have occurred before the
conclusion of the agreement.
The
respondent therefore argues that the agreement ought to have been
sanctioned by unanimous resolution of the owners, as is required
in
terms of section 17(1) of the STA read with section 5(1)(a) of the
STSMA, before the agreement had been concluded.
47.
In its replying affidavit, the applicant
presented the sale agreements which had been concluded for the
purchase of units 9, 10
and 11 and it generally disputed the
contentions and arguments of the respondent, save that it
acknowledged the relationship between
the sole director of HF
Property and the erstwhile purchaser of units 9, 10 and 11.
48.
Further arguments raised by the respondent
were that:
(a)
she has tracked the sale of units in the
scheme and she presented figures to demonstrate increases in the
value of such units;
(b)
there was a marked difference between what
HF Property will pay for the right to extend the scheme (R500,000.00)
compared to the
values placed on units 9,10 and 11 in the agreement,
which units exist on common property; and
(c)
if the occupiers do not purchase the
properties (as recorded in the right of first refusal clause) then HF
Property will be able
to sell those properties and keep the proceeds.
49.
The respondent contends that these issues
ought properly to have been dealt with in terms of section 17(1) of
the STA because it
concerns the sale of common property which may
only lawfully occur upon “unanimous resolution” and after
permission
has been granted by the members to the applicant to sell
that common property.
50.
The broad counter by the applicant to the
concerns raised by the respondent was to the effect that:
(a)
members were given information, their
questions could have been answered and, if necessary, a meeting of
members could have been
called, but that this was not necessary
because the majority had provided their consent;
(b)
its agreement with HF Property is merely
for the “exercise” and “cession” of its right
to extend the scheme,
as contemplated in section 5(1)(b) of the
STSMA;
(c)
the agreement with HF Property is subject
to a suspensive condition and is therefore “inchoate”
until members have consented
thereto;
(d)
the respondent has presented no counter
valuation for units 9, 10 and 11; and
(e)
accordingly, the applicant contends that
the respondent has “no good cause in law” to withhold her
consent for it to
exercise and cede its right to extend the scheme to
HF Property.
51.
Apart from these broad arguments, the
affidavits from the parties reflect an obvious measure of distrust
and suspicion of each other.
Nevertheless,
the issues presented are of a legal rather than a factual nature.
## The Law
The Law
52.
What I am required to determine is whether
the respondent has demonstrated good cause in law for her refusal to
consent to what
it is that the applicant proposes to do.
To answer that question, I must determine
what it is that the applicant proposes to do, as it is recorded in
the agreement that
it has concluded with HF Property.
This in turn will assist to determine how
the legislature has dealt with these matters in the STA and the
STSMA.
53.
I have quoted the provisions of section
25(6) of the STA earlier.
54.
Section 17 of the STA is to the effect that
owners (and holders of a right of extension in section 25) may
authorise a body corporate
to alienate or lease common property:
“
17
Alienation and letting of common property
(1) The owners and
holders of a right of extension contemplated in section 25 may, if
authorised in terms of section 5(1)(a)
of the [STSMA] direct the body
corporate on their behalf to alienate common property or any part
thereof, or to let common property
or any part thereof under a lease,
and thereupon the body corporate shall … subject to compliance
with any law …
have the power to deal with such common
property or such part thereof in accordance with the direction, and
to execute any deed
required for the purpose: Provided that if the
whole of the right referred to in section 25 … is affected by
the alienation
of common property, such right shall be cancelled by
the registrar with the consent of the holder thereof on submission of
the
title to the right.”
55.
Sections 5(1)(a) and (b) of the STSMA
provide as follows:
“
5
Additional powers of bodies corporate
(1)
In addition to the body corporate’s
main functions and powers under sections 3 and 4, the body corporate
-
(a)
may, upon unanimous resolution, on
direction by the owners and with the written consent of any holder of
a right of extension contemplated
in section 25 of the [STA],
alienate common property, or any part thereof, or let the common
property or any part thereof under
a lease, and thereupon the body
corporate may, subject to section 17(1) of the [STA] deal with such
common property or such part
thereof in accordance with the direction
and may execute any deed required for this purpose, including any
deed required under
the [STA]…”;
(b)
may, with the written consent of all the
owners as well as the written consent of the mortgagee of each unit
in the scheme, alienate,
or in terms of the [STA] exercise or cede, a
right of extension of the scheme by the addition of sections:
Provided that an owner
or mortgagee may not withhold such approval
without good cause in law;
(c)
-(i)
…
(2)
…”
.
56.
Clearly, when the developer’s
reserved right to extend the San Sydney scheme lapsed, the applicant
acquired the legislatively
vested right to extend the scheme, through
section 25(6) of the STA.
57.
To secure such entitlement, the applicant
would, as a first step, have to obtain a certificate of real right of
extension from the
registrar of deeds.
Section 25(6) entitles the applicant to
obtain a certificate of real right to extend the scheme.
It may do so “subject to this
section, section 5(1)(b) of the Sectional Titles Schemes Management
Act and after compliance,
with the necessary changes, with the
requirements of paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (d) and (g) of subsection
(2).”
58.
Then section 25(6) contains a proviso to
the effect that a body corporate may “only exercise, alienate
or transfer such right
with the written consent of all the members of
the body corporate, the mortgagees of the units and real rights over
the units,
and the holders of registered real rights over the units
in the scheme and who shall not withhold such consent without good
cause
in law.”
59.
The owners in the San Sydney scheme may
decide that they do not want to extend the scheme.
They may decide that they want to sell or
lease all or part of that common property.
60.
These are outcomes contemplated in section
17 of the STA which regulates the “alienation and letting of
common property.”
The
owners may decide and direct the applicant on their behalf to sell or
lease such common property.
That
authority from the owners must be given by unanimous resolution in
accordance with section 5(1)(a) of the STSMA.
61.
What seems clear from this legislative
framework is that such additional powers that the applicant may
exercise must be preceded
in the first instance upon the authority
and by the direction of the owners.
62.
If the applicant exercises its right to
extend the scheme, the effect of this extension will be that new
units are registered and
included in the San Sydney scheme, with
corresponding changes to what is presently reflected as common
property therein.
The
members of the applicant are owners of units with an indivisible
share in that common property.
It
follows that any change to the common property will invariably affect
the members’ indivisible share in the common property.
63.
The applicant is also empowered to
“alienate common property” or “let common property”
as provided for in
section 17(1) of the STA.
Either of these options requires authority
from the members and a direction to the body corporate to do so on
their behalf.
Those
are the statutory standards through which the applicant obtains its
power to alienate or let common property.
64.
The SMTA categorises the power to alienate
or let common property as “additional powers of bodies
corporate” in section
5.
This
includes the powers in section 5(1)(a) to alienate or let common
property, which must be done “upon unanimous resolution,
on
direction by the owners…”
65.
The definitions in section 1 of the STSMA
deal with special and unanimous resolutions.
Both types of resolutions require the
holding of a “meeting” with members.
In the case of a special resolution this
must be taken by a majority of 75% of the votes, in number and value
of the members present
at a general meeting; and in the case of a
unanimous resolution, 80% of the votes are required at a meeting
representing both number
and value of votes of the members present at
such meeting.
66.
However, both types of resolutions may also
be “agreed to in writing by all the members of the body
corporate.”
67.
The powers in section 5(1)(b) relate to the
alienation, exercise or cession of “a right of extension of the
scheme by the
addition of sections.”
In this instance, the legislative standard
for the trustees so to act is “the written consent of all the
owners” and
mortgagees.
68.
Ultimately, decisions of this nature can
only be made by owners if they have all relevant information before
them, or all “material
information” as the respondent put
it.
## Application of the Law to
the Facts
Application of the Law to
the Facts
69.
The applicant contends that the respondent
has fundamentally misunderstood the agreement it has concluded with
HF Property.
It
contends that such agreement reflects the trustees’ choice to
“exercise” and “cede” the right of
extension
to HF Property.
On
this basis, it contends that all that is required, in terms of
section 5(1)(b) of the STSMA is the written consent of owners.
70.
I disagree with this characterisation by
the applicant of the agreement as one through which it simply
exercises or cedes its right
of extension.
71.
In my view, a consideration of the
agreement in its totality reveals that the applicant has
not
simply exercised or ceded its right to extend the scheme.
It has done more.
72.
The agreement provides for the sale of
buildings constructed on common property, it sets minimum prices for
such sale in so far
as the present occupiers are concerned and it
requires changes to the scheme consequent upon the sale and extension
of the scheme
to incorporate these as units in the sectional title
register.
73.
The applicant is not itself exercising its
right to extend the scheme.
It
is ceding its right to do so to HF Property.
It has authorised HF Property to extend the
scheme by the inclusion of the presently unregistered units 9, 10 and
11.
74.
The
de
facto
position
is
that
these
buildings
have
been
erected
on
common
property and that such buildings are capable of being valued and
sold.
HF Property
is authorised to sell these units to the present occupiers, or to
other purchasers.
If
the respondent’s figures are anything to go by, then comparable
sales demonstrate that units within the San Sydney scheme
have
increased in value over time.
That
value will not revert to the body corporate and its members, but will
be retained by HF Property, in exchange for the payment
of
R500,000.00.
75.
An important, related question is whether
the members of the body corporate have properly sanctioned such
“additional”
powers, as is required in section 5(1)(a) of
the STSMA.
76.
There is no suggestion from the applicant
that it called a meeting with its members at which it presented any
of the options for
discussion or decision by such owners.
There is no resolution arising from any
such meeting.
Nor
are any minutes presented of a meeting in which such matters were
discussed, options were presented, debated upon and in which
resolutions were taken.
77.
It is evident from the founding affidavit
that the applicant presented its decision to members as a
fait
accompli.
It
did explain its reasoning, it offered to make further information
available to members, yet it also threatened litigation.
78.
As I interpret the scheme of the STA and
the STSMA, these “additional powers” of the applicant
ought properly to have
been preceded by resolution and a direction by
owners to sell or lease common property.
That resolution and direction ought also to
have preceded the applicant’s decision about whether to
exercise or cede the right
to extend the scheme.
79.
If all these decisions were to be done
simultaneously, as is apparent from the agreement with HF Property,
then all of these matters
ought to have been presented to members for
discussion, debate and for a resolution to be taken. That would then
have yielded the
“authority” by members of the applicant
to “deal with such common property or such part thereof in
accordance
with such direction” as required in section 5(1)(a)
of the STSMA, in addition to ceding the right of extension to HF
Property
in accordance with section 25(6) of the STA read with
section 5(1)(b) of the STSMA.
80.
What also emerges from the papers is that
the developer may not have paid amounts lawfully due to the
applicant, in the form of
levies, for failure to extend the scheme
within the stipulated time.
This
is an obligation recorded in section 25(5A)(b) which makes the
developer liable for the payment of levies “as if the
unit has
been included in the relevant sectional title register on the date of
completion.”
81.
Unfortunately, that is the very conundrum
which confronted applicant’s trustees. The developer did not
act as it was required
to, it continued after the lapse of its
authority to extend the scheme to erect buildings on portions of the
common property and
it appeared to have derived revenue therefrom
either through advances on purchase prices or through rentals paid by
occupiers.
82.
In my view, what all of this demonstrates
is that such matters ought properly to have been presented to the
applicant’s members,
with sufficient information such as the
present value of the buildings erected on common property and what
the applicant has been
deprived off in the form of levies in the
interim.
This in
turn would have enabled the members to make an informed decision as
to whether to sell or lease the portions of the common
property upon
which units 9, 10 and 11 have been erected, whether the applicant
ought itself to exercise the right to extend the
scheme to regularise
matters, or whether it ought to cede such right either to HF Property
or to any other third party.
83.
Given
the interlocking nature of sectional ownership described earlier,
[10]
there can be no debate that members of the applicant have a direct
and substantial interest such matters.
No
doubt this is why the legislature made specific provision for these
additional powers to be exercised by a body corporate upon
the
authority, direction or written consent of the members in accordance
with the processes set out in sections 5(1)(a) and (b)
of the STSMA.
84.
Mr Stewart for the applicant referred me
during argument to the decision of the SCA in
Body
Corporate of Savannah Park v Brainwave Projects 1147 CC and Others
2012 (2) SA 276
(SCA).
The argument advanced by Mr Stewart was
that the respondent had failed to appreciate the nature of the
agreement that the applicant
had concluded with HF Property.
Mr Stewart relied upon the characterisation
of the developer’s right to extend the scheme as described by
the SCA in
Savannah Parks
,
to the effect that this is only a limited real right given to the
developer which is akin to a praedial servitude.
He argued that this is all that the
agreement in this case deals with.
85.
In
Savannah
Parks
, the SCA had to deal with the
erection of a cell phone mast on
common
property.
That
mast
had
been
erected
pursuant
to
a
lease concluded with the developer, at a
time when the relevant unit had not yet been registered in the
sectional title register.
The
developer believed that it was entitled to retain revenue that it
derived from that lease while it had reserved the right to
extend the
scheme to accommodate that unit, and after it had exercised that
right and it became the registered owner of that unit.
86.
The issue in that case was whether the
rental income accrued to the developer or to the body corporate.
It was in that context that the SCA was
called upon to determine “the narrow question … whether
the [developer’s]
right of extension includes a usufruct in its
ambit” (at paragraph 9).
87.
The SCA held that the right of extension
which a developer may reserve in terms of section 25(4)(a) of the
STA, is a limited real
right, which does not give the developer a
right to exploit a unit commercially before completion.
This emerges from the following passages in
that decision:
“
[12]
… I do not think that the
characterisation of that right as a personal servitude is
sustainable.
And,
considered against its purpose, the right also cannot encompass a
usufruct … The reserved right only gives a developer
the right
to develop further phases of a scheme.
In
doing so, the developer must comply with strictly with the
documentation and plans accompanying the application for registration
of the sectional plan.
Having
exercised the right, the developer must … immediately after
completing the relevant unit, apply to register the relevant
plan and
the inclusion of the completed unit in the sectional title register.
It is, therefore, a limited real right.”
[13] Properly construed,
the description of the right as ‘á right to immovable
property’ ‘for all purposes’
does not change this.
The Act clearly does not contemplate the leasing of a unit (or part
thereof) - as would be the case with
a usufruct - or give the
developer any right to exploit the unit commercially before
completion…”. (Footnotes omitted.)
88.
It was in that context that the SCA
described the right of extension reserved by a developer as a limited
real right, which did
not give the developer without more, the right
to lease that section of the common property or to derive revenue
from that lease.
In
that factual context, the SCA concluded that such rental income ought
properly to accrue to the body corporate and it made orders
to
facilitate that outcome.
89.
I do not think that the description of the
right of extension reserved by a developer, in
Savannah
Parks
, assists the applicant in this
case.
The
agreement in this case deals with the applicant’s right to
extend the scheme, its sale and cession thereof
and
it permits the sale of common property.
90.
In this regard, the respondent contends
that prior to concluding the agreement with HF Property, the
applicant ought to have:
(a)
called a meeting of the owners;
(b)
undertaken a valuation of the buildings on
units 9, 10 and 11;
(c)
apprised the owners of all material facts;
and
(d)
secured a unanimous resolution from the
owners to grant HF Property the right to become “the owner of
three units in San Sydney”.
91.
In its replying affidavit the applicant
denies these allegations and contends that there was no obligation on
it to call a meeting
of the owners, that the owners could have
requested such meeting and that further information could have been
provided on request.
The
applicant states that it had authority to conclude the agreement with
HF Property, that the agreement is suspensive on it obtaining
the
consent of the owners and that it is merely exercising its vested
right to extend the scheme, without it claiming “ownership”
of units 9, 10 and 11. It contends that the respondent has been
obstructive by failing to provide reasons for not consenting and
it
contends that she has no good cause in law to refuse her consent for
the purposes of section 5)(1)(b) of the STSMA.
92.
According to the applicant, rentals have
been paid in respect of units 9, 10 and 11, to the developer “until
recently”.
There
is no indication about what has happened with respect to the payment
of rentals since that undefined date.
93.
In my view, what has happened in this case,
is the reverse of the legislative processes through which decisions
such as these ought
properly to have been made.
94.
On
the facts before me, it seems clear that the applicant’s
trustees were confronted with a difficult situation.
The
developer overstepped his lawful authority and, for whatever reason,
he constructed the additional units on common property.
The developer
may also have succeeded in deriving revenue from those unregistered
units, which ought properly to have accrued to
the applicant.
[11]
95.
The applicant’s trustees considered
their options, took a decision and then presented their decision to
the owners as a
fait accompli
.
When they did so they
thought
that
they
had
the
power
to
do
so,
subject
to
the
consent
of
the owners.
The
owners were then told that if they refused to consent, that would be
challenged in court as a refusal without good cause in
law.
Although the applicant explained the
reasons for its decision, these were presented with little factual
information, upon the assertions
that these decisions were correct
and that any deviation from this would be without good cause in law.
96.
There is no suggestion in the founding
affidavit that any of the various options were put before the owners,
with sufficient information
to enable them to make informed
decisions, to debate the options and ultimately to decide about what
to do as those who would be
directly affected.
Certainly, none of this appears to have
been done before the conclusion of the agreement with HF Property.
97.
If the letters sent to the respondent are
anything to go by, including the limited replies to the information
that was sought by
her, then,
prima
facie
, the owners did not have the full
facts before them when they were asked to provide their written
consent.
98.
Despite claiming that the applicant did not
have access to the ‘sale’ agreements concluded between
the developer and
purchasers of units 9,10 and 11, some of those
documents emerged in the replying affidavit delivered by the
applicant.
99.
Further documents have been presented in
the respondent’s answering affidavit to suggest that the sole
director of HF Property
has an interest in units 9,10 and 11 because
these were sold to his mother (who is now deceased), who advanced and
lost some of
the purchase prices and who subsequently sold them to
the present purchasers.
The
replying affidavit records that the trustees were concerned about
these losses caused to Mr Hodgson’s mother and they
regarded Mr
Dean Hodgson’s “personal and direct involvement”
and that of his mother as amongst the important
factors the
considered when they concluded the agreement with HF Property.
In my view, these matters ought to have
been disclosed to the owners.
100.
What has emerged in the affidavits in this
matter, is substantially less information than that conveyed to the
respondent in the
letter of 30 May 2018, albeit that it stated that
“questions or concerns” would be addressed.
That letter effectively advised the
respondent that the applicant had already taken a decision over such
matters and that it had
acquired a new developer to register these
sections, who would absorb the costs of that extension to the scheme
and who would pay
R500.000.00 for that purpose.
101.
I am not required to decide whether the
option selected by the applicant was correct or not, or whether it
was the best decision
in the circumstances.
The legislature leaves those decisions to
be made by owners and others with a direct interest in such matters.
Once they consider and decide such issues,
they authorise and direct the applicant, through its trustees, to act
in accordance with
such directions.
102.
Accordingly, my view is that the
legislative process through which such “such additional powers”
could have been exercised
by the applicant, were not followed.
This means that when the trustees concluded
the agreement, they acted outside their powers.
103.
There is a marked difference between saying
to sectional owners “here are the facts, please make a decision
and authorise
me to execute your
decision”
as compared to saying “here is the decision we have made on
your behalf, and if you disagree you must prove
that you have good
cause in law not to accept our decision or we will ask a Judge to
rule on the matter.”
In
my view, that is to subvert the decision-making process set out in
the STA and STSMA.
104.
The
factual situation presented at the San Sydney scheme presented
problems but also options for the applicant and its members.
The
benefits and risks of each option ought to have been considered by
the members of the applicant, who hold the common property
in
undivided shares and through which “a section and its undivided
share in the common property shall together be deemed
to be one
unit.”
[12]
105.
These
members would inevitably be affected by the option chosen.
When
a sectional plan of extension is registered, the sectional title
register is extended to include the sections and exclusive
use areas
and a certificate of registered sectional title is issued in respect
of each unit, which reflects its respective exclusive
use areas and
undivided share in common property.
[13]
106.
Upon
registration of a sectional plan of extension, the owners “shall
be divested of their share or interest to the common
property to the
extent that an undivided share in the common property is vested in”
the developer or the body corporate (depending
on who has exercised
that right of extension).
[14]
107.
Section 17 of the STA provides for the
members to “direct the body corporate on their behalf to
alienate common property or
any part thereof, or to let common
property or any part thereof under a lease...”.
In turn, these are categorised in the STSMA
as “additional powers” which can be exercised by the body
corporate, after
being so authorised and directed by its members.
108.
The
applicant in this case purported to exercise those additional powers,
and made decisions about common property, as if it were
exercising
its ordinary powers to manage and administer the scheme and generally
to “control, manage and administer the common
property for the
benefit of all the owners.”
[15]
109.
Does it make a difference that that the
agreement with HF Property is subject to a suspensive condition that
the written consent
of owners must be obtained? The argument advanced
by Mr Stewart for the applicant, on this issue, is that the
suspensive condition
renders the agreement inchoate and therefore
that the applicant did not need the prior consent of its owners to
have made those
decisions.
110.
Mr
Skinner SC for the respondent contended however, that the suspensive
condition does not alter the legislative consequences, given
the
provisions at issue and because the Alienation of Land Act includes
within the term “alienate” a sale “subject
to a
suspensive” condition.
[16]
I
agree.
111.
The plain meaning of the term “alienate”
as it is used in section 17(1) of the STA, must include the divesting
of that
common property from the scheme, which is wholly different to
alienating a right of extension, as the applicant contends it has
done in the agreement.
The
first requires the “unanimous resolution” in section
5(1)(a) of the STSMA while the second requires the written
consent of
all the owners for the alienation, cession or exercise of a right of
extension by the body corporate, as specified in
section 5(1)(b) of
the STSMA.
112.
In
Torgos
(Pty) Ltd v Body Corporate of Anchors Aweigh and Another
[2005] ZAGPHC 123
;
2006
(3) SA 369
(W), Satchwell J was called upon to consider the right to
alienate and transfer the right to extend a scheme.
This was in the context of the STA prior to
the amendments bought about to it by the enactment of the STSMA,
which took effect on
8 October 2011, although nothing of substance
turns on this.
113.
In
Torgos
the
court had to consider the provisions of section 25(6) of the STA. The
issue was whether the body corporate could be forced to
implement an
agreement it had concluded with a third party, through which it had
sold and ceded the right to extend the scheme.
The body corporate claimed that the
agreement it had concluded with the third party was void
ab
initio
as it had not secured the prior
written consent of the owners as required by the first proviso to
section 25(6) (as it then read).
The
third party sought to enforce the agreement upon the basis that the
second proviso to section 25(6) only required the written
consent
prior to transfer and not prior to the conclusion of the agreement of
cession of the right of extension.
The
third party argued that the agreement was therefore valid and
enforceable.
114.
Importantly, for present purposes, the
court in
Torgos
undertook
an examination of the “purpose of the proviso to s 25(6), and
in whose interests” it had been enacted.
The court considered these matters from the
perspective of owners and mortgagees and concluded as follows:
“
I
have no doubt that the clear purpose of the proviso is to protect
owners of units from discovering that the value of their undivided
share in the common property of the sectional title scheme has been
diminished or has disappeared by cession of the right vested
in the
body corporate to extend that scheme. Further, it is to protect such
owners from discovering that a scheme which has had
a known and
limited number of units and an extended expanse of common property
and amenities has unexpectedly had that the number
of units increased
and the common property diminished by reason of a developer’s
exercising the right to extend the scheme
which formerly vested in
the body corporate.
In
short, insofar as the members of the body corporate or the owners of
the units are concerned, they are entitled to be protected
against a
diminution in the value of their units - both section and share in
common property - whether this value is in monetary
terms or by way
of enjoyment of their units.
The
protection afforded is to ensure that they know of the alienation or
transfer of the right to extend the scheme, are aware of
the
implications thereof to them, are aware of the loss to them in some
terms and the gains to them in other terms.
…
[77] The purpose of the
proviso is then clear: to protect persons and institutions who have
invested money and living or work arrangements
in a sectional title
scheme - who are members or mortgagees. The proviso is therefore
solely for the benefit of these two groups
and none other.”
115.
The court then addressed the issue at which
stage the written consent of the owners was required, that is, prior
to concluding the
agreement of cession as the body corporate argued,
or prior to registration of transfer as the third party argued.
116.
Satchwell J considered the use of the term
“alienate” in section 17 of the STA, which deals with
“alienation or
letting of common property” and resolved
this
issue as
follows:
“
[89]
I conclude that to ‘alienate’
includes the dispossession of the right to extend through a sale and
cession while ‘transfer’
refers to the formal act
required by statute and which publicly enacts and completes such
dispossession.
Once
can do neither without the ‘written consent’ of owners
and mortgagees.”
117.
On the issue of when the written consents
had to be obtained, the court concluded:
“
[95]
Subsection 26(6) permits the body corporate
to alienate its right
only
with
the necessary consents.
Absent
such consents, the body corporate is not permitted so to do.”
118.
After
considering various textual indicators in the STA, the court
concluded that the agreement by the body corporate in that case,
to
sell and cede its right to extend the scheme, had to have been
preceded by the written consent of owners, without which the
body
corporate could not validly have concluded the agreement with the
third party.
[17]
Accordingly,
the court upheld the arguments of the body corporate and concluded
that:
“
[107]
…[T]he written consents required by
the proviso to section 25(6) must be furnished prior to the
conclusion of the agreement
which is the act of alienation.”
119.
Satchwell J therefore dismissed the
argument advanced by the third party that the written consent of
owners could be obtained “later”
because the peremptory
terms of the proviso were clear, that is, that the body corporate
“shall only” alienate that
right with the written consent
of the owners.
120.
In his further submissions for the
applicant, Mr Stewart sought to distinguish the agreement that was at
issue in
Torgos
upon
the basis that there was no indication in that matter that the
agreement made provision for the written consent of owners to
be
obtained later, through a suspensive condition, such as is the
position in the agreement before me.
121.
On this aspect, Satchwell J remarked that
even if the agreement in that case had contained a suspensive
condition to this effect,
“such [suspensive] condition would
probably not have assisted the applicant in claiming an agreement to
alienate validated
by the subsequent provision of the written
consents” but the court expressed no final view on that issue
(at paragraph 110).
122.
I accept that the comments at paragraph 110
in
Torgos
were
expressed as
obiter
statements.
Nevertheless, I have considered these
issues and can see no reason to depart from the clear legislative
standards and processes
set in sections 25(6) and 17(1) of the STA,
which must be read with section 5(1) of the STSMA.
123.
I have already concluded that the agreement
with HF Property did more than merely exercise or cede the right to
extend the scheme.
On
its terms it authorised the sale of sections of the common property
in the form of units 9, 10 and 11, with the proceeds thereof
ostensibly to be retained by HF Property.
124.
If the members of a body corporate are
required by unanimous resolution to direct the body corporate to
alienate or let common property
in the scheme, then logically that
process must unfold first, so as to enable such members to decide
upon the options available
to them with respect to that common
property.
125.
In my view, the unusual factual situation
presented in this case demonstrates forcefully why this prior consent
is important.
The
members of the applicant, could decide to sell or lease that common
property, which are the options available to them in section
17(1) of
the STA.
126.
They could also decide that the body
corporate must “exercise” or undertake the extension of
the scheme itself, given
that it has the vested right to do so. They
could also decide that the body corporate must “alienate”
or “cede”
that right to extend the scheme.
127.
All of these decisions are of a genus
categorised by the legislature as “additional powers” of
the applicant (in section
5 of the STSMA).
128.
The agreement presented in this application
does more than merely cede the right of extension to HF Property, it
also includes the
sale of portions of the common property.
It follows that I agree with the
submissions advanced by Mr Skinner SC for the respondent, that such
decision and agreement ought
to have been preceded by unanimous
resolution as defined in the STA and as is replicated in the STSMA
through the provisions of
section 5(1)(a).
129.
Ordinary
human experience suggests that the applicant’s members have a
direct and substantial interest in what is to happen
with units 9, 10
and 11, which have been built on common property, and which they hold
jointly in undivided shares.
[18]
They
ought therefore to have been consulted about these matters, prior to
the body corporate making a determination about the best
option for
the owners and prior to the conclusion of the agreement with HF
Property.
130.
The applicant’s trustees did not do
so.
They
therefore acted outside their powers when they concluded the
agreement with HF Property, without the prior authorisation and
direction from the owners.
## Conclusion
Conclusion
131.
I therefore conclude that the first
respondent has good cause in law to withhold her consent.
132.
It follows that the application must be
dismissed with costs.
133.
On the issue of costs, the respondent’s
attorney in further written submissions argued that an adverse costs
order against
the applicant would ultimately have to be borne by the
owners, including the first respondent.
Formulations of orders were submitted to
insulate the first respondent in this regard.
134.
I have not had the views of the applicant
on this issue and therefore see no reason to depart from the usual
order that costs follow
the result.
135.
I therefore make the following
Order
:
A.
The application is dismissed.
B.
The applicant is directed to pay the first
respondent’s costs.
(
Delivered
electronically.)
Gabriel AJ
# CASE INFORMATION
CASE INFORMATION
Date
of hearing:
9
May 2023
Date
delivered:
23
June 2023 (As agreed by electronic circulation to the parties on
this date.)
# APPEARANCES:
APPEARANCES
:
Counsel
for Applicant:
Advocate
Malcolm Stewart
Instructed
by:
Northmore
Montague Attorneys Spaces, 2 Ncondo Place Umhlanga Ridge
DURBAN
(Ref:
K Northmore/MAT12466) Tel: 031 830 5157
E-mail:
kelly@northmont.co.za
Counsel
for Respondents:
Advocate
Barry Skinner SC Instructed
By:
Asmal
& Asmal Attorneys
(Ref:
Mr Asmal/55/S838/Gen) Tel: 032 552 1245
E-mail:
asmalx2@telkomsa.net
c/o
Messenger King
Suite
1001, Durban Club Chambers 5 Durban Club Place
DURBAN
[1]
Mobile
Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd and Another v Spilhaus Property
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others
2018
(3) SA 396
(SCA), at paragraph 1, which is quoted in
Body
Corporate of Marine Sands v Extra Dimensions 121 (Pty) Ltd and
Another
2020
(2) SA 61
(SCA), at paragraph 15, read with paragraph 16.
[2]
Body
Corporate of Marine
Sands,
supra
,
at paragraph 16.
[3]
Zikalala
v Body Corporate, Selma Court and Another
2022
(2) SA 305
, at paragraphs 19-23 and 25.
This
case deals with the role of trustees, who are required to act within
the legislative powers granted to bodies corporate as
creatures of
statute, as well as in accordance with any restrictions or
directions given at a general meeting of owners.
[4]
See
also, Torgos (Pty) Ltd v Body Corporate of Anchors Aweigh and
Another
[2005] ZAGPHC 123
;
2006
(3) SA 369
(W), at paragraphs 66 to 107.
The
decision in
Croxford
Trading 7 v the Body Corporate of the Inyoni Rocks Cabanas Scheme no
111/1978
(174/2010)
[2011] ZASCA 27
(18 March 2011), provides a legislative history of
the developer’s right of extension, at paragraphs 2-5.
[5]
SP
and Catering, supra, a
t
paragraph 3.
At
paragraph 5, the Supreme Court of Appeal held that the Court has no
inherent power to extend the period beyond which the developer’s
right of extension would lapse.
[6]
“
Annexure
J” to the founding affidavit, entitled “Memorandum of
Agreement.”
[7]
Big
Sky Trading 426 CC, which was placed into provisional liquidation by
Order dated 9 February 2016.
[8]
I
shall refer to these buildings on proposed units 9,10 and 11 as
“units” for convenience, noting that they are not
registered sections nor units as defined in the STA, within the San
Sydney scheme.
[9]
Draft
written consent forms were sent to all members of the applicant, all
of whom have consented save for the respondent.
There
could be an error in the consents signed by the applicant’s
members because these refer to section 24(6) of the STA
and not to
section 25(6) of the STA.
Section
24(6) deals with “extension of sections” whereas section
25 deals with “extension of schemes by addition
of sections
and exclusive use areas or by addition of exclusive use areas only.”
Regrettably,
I could not find an answer to this because the building plans
attached to the founding affidavit are so reduced in
scale as to be
illegible and the developer’s certificate of real right of
extension refers to sectional plans which were
not included in the
papers.
[10]
In
Body
Corporate of Marine Sands
,
supra
at
paragraph 15 and 16.
See
also
,
Body
Corporate Selma Court
,
supra
,
at paragraphs 23-26 and paragraph 31 for an application of these
principles in the context of the duty to collect levies.
[11]
Body
Corporate of Savannah Park
,
supra
,
at paragraph 13.
[12]
Section
16(3) of the STA.
[13]
Section
25(11) of the STA.
[14]
Section
25(12) of the STA.
[15]
Sections
3 and 4 of the STA, in particular the general function specified in
section
3(1)(t).
[16]
Section
1
of the
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
, the definition of
“alienate.”
[17]
At
paragraphs 90-107.
[18]
In
proportion to the quotas of their respective sections as specified
on the relevant sectional plan, as provided in
section 16(1)
of the
STA.
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