Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 132South Africa
Pinehurst Lodge Body Corporate v Fouche and Others (2024/067958) [2025] ZAGPJHC 132 (24 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 February 2025
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Pinehurst Lodge Body Corporate v Fouche and Others (2024/067958) [2025] ZAGPJHC 132 (24 February 2025)
Pinehurst Lodge Body Corporate v Fouche and Others (2024/067958) [2025] ZAGPJHC 132 (24 February 2025)
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sino date 24 February 2025
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Process in aid –
Magistrate's
court judgment
–
Secured
by body corporate for unpaid levies and other charges –
Nulla bona return from sheriff – Applicant seeking
to
execute against primary residence – Unsuccessful in
magistrate’s court so approaching High Court –
Magistrate’s court has power necessary to order and oversee
execution of judgment – Process-in-aid is not meant
to
permit appeal in disguise – Application dismissed.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 24 February 2025
Case
No.
2024-067958
In
the matter between:
PINEHURST
LODGE BODY CORPORATE
Applicant
and
JANINE
LAETITIA FOUCHE
First Respondent
ABSA
BANK
Second Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Fourth Respondent
Summary
The High Court will not
provide process-in-aid of enforcement of a Magistrates’ Court
money judgment where the Magistrates’
Court has the power
necessary to order and oversee the execution of that judgment.
Process-in-aid should not be provided where
a litigant is merely
critical of the way in which the Magistrates’ Court chooses to
exercise its powers of execution.
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The respondent, Ms. Fouche, owns a unit in the sectional title
scheme out of which the applicant, Pinehurst, is constituted. On 23
October 2023, Pinehurst obtained judgment against Ms. Fouche in the
Magistrates’ Court for just under R170 000 in unpaid
levies and
other charges due to Pinehurst in terms of the body corporate’s
management rules and the resolutions made under
them.
2
On 12 March 2024, the Sheriff sought to execute the judgment
against Ms. Fouche’s moveable property. Ms Fouche told the
Sheriff
that she had neither money nor disposable property capable of
satisfying the judgment. The Sheriff accordingly issued a
nulla
bona
return, confirming that he could find nothing belonging to
Ms. Fouche that could be sold to settle her debt. It can safely be
inferred
from the Sheriff’s return that Ms. Fouche’s unit
is her primary residence. Pinehurst does not suggest otherwise.
3
Pinehurst then sought an order in the Magistrates’ Court
authorising it to execute the judgment debt against Ms. Fouche’s
home. Pinehurst gives almost no detail of these efforts, but it
appears that they have to date been unsuccessful. Pinehurst states
that it faced Magistrates who flatly refused to consider execution
against Ms. Fouche’s unit and who caused “extreme
delay
in the process through multiple postponements and additional
requirements, not in terms of the Rules” (Founding Affidavit
of
Kim Bam, paragraph 24).
4
Pinehurst then instituted this application, which was enrolled
before me in my unopposed motion court on 19 February 2025. Pinehurst
once again seeks leave to execute its Magistrates’ Court
judgment against Ms. Fouche’s unit. It relies on the common
law
doctrine of “process-in-aid”, which permits a superior
court to enforce the judgment of a lower court, where the
lower
court’s judgment “cannot be effectively enforced through
its own process” (see
Bannatyne v Bannatyne
[2002] ZACC 31
;
2003 (2) SA
363
(CC) (“
Bannatyne
”), paragraph 20 and the
authorities cited there). Because the High Court’s remedial
powers are generally more extensive
than those of the Magistrates’
Court, those powers may be deployed to ensure the enforcement of a
Magistrates’ Court
judgment where a Magistrate’s efforts
to do so have failed.
5
In
Van Den Bos NO v Mohloki
2022 (2) SA 616
(GJ)
Gilbert AJ held that this court has the discretion to provide
process-in-aid of execution of a Magistrates’ Court money
judgment by declaring a judgment debtor’s primary residence
specially executable for the judgment amount secured in the
Magistrates’ Court. Gilbert AJ declined, however, to order
special execution in the matters before him, having found that
the
applicant had adduced no facts which could justify the exercise of
his discretion to do so.
6
At the level of principle, Gilbert AJ is of course correct.
This court does have the discretion to provide the kind of
process-in-aid
he identified. However, for the reasons that follow, I
struggle to think of a situation where the exercise of that power
would
be appropriate.
The
Magistrates’ Court can execute its own money judgments
7
In the first place, the decision in
Bannatyne
makes
clear that process-in-aid ought only to be deployed in circumstances
where the Magistrates’ Court cannot effectively
enforce its own
judgments. In this case, there can be no dispute that the
Magistrates’ Court has the full range of powers
necessary to
order execution of a judgment debt against a debtor’s primary
residence. Section 66 of the Magistrates’
Court Act 32 of 1944
and Rules 43 and 43A of the Magistrates’ Court Rules afford the
Magistrates’ Court all the powers
it needs to enforce its own
judgments against the immovable property of a judgment debtor. Save
for the limits on the Magistrates’
Court’s monetary
jurisdiction, those powers are in almost every material respect
identical to the powers this court has to
oversee execution of its
own money judgments.
Appeal
in disguise
8
Secondly, Pinehurst’s complaint is not that the
Magistrates’ Court cannot enforce the judgment debt in this
case. It
is that Pinehurst has not been able to persuade a Magistrate
to do so. Pinehurst’s case in this respect is laconic. It
provides
no particulars of when it applied to execute against Ms.
Fouche’s unit, how often it did so, the reasons given for
postponing
or refusing its application, or why it has not been able
to remedy the defects in its application the Magistrates’ Court
has presumably identified. This case has all the hallmarks of an
appeal against or review of the exercise of a magisterial power,
save
that no grounds of review or appeal have been set out.
9
Process-in-aid is not meant to permit an appeal in disguise.
Nor is it meant to provide a disgruntled litigant with avenues of
redress
against what that litigant perceives to be institutional
malaise in a lower court. I cannot foresee the circumstances in which
this court could properly incline to usurp a lower court’s
powers of execution merely because a litigant is critical of the
way
the lower court chooses to exercise those powers. There would have to
be demonstrable and institution-wide breakdown before
that course of
action could constitute a legitimate option.
10
Even at its most plaintive, Pinehurst’s criticism of the
Magistrates’ Court does not suggest ineptitude of this type.
At
bottom, Pinehurst’s case is that successive Magistrates have
not seen things Pinehurst’s way. If those Magistrates
fell into
error, Pinehurst’s remedy is to review or appeal the relevant
decisions. The invocation of process-in-aid is inappropriate.
The
High Court’s power to refuse execution against a primary
residence
11
Thirdly, the invocation of process-in-aid has the potential to
hobble this court’s discretion to decline to execute a money
judgment against a judgment debtor’s primary residence. An
essential part of the exercise of that discretion is to consider
whether the debt might be payable over time, without having to take
the drastic step of executing against a debtor’s home
(see
Jaftha v Schoeman
[2004] ZACC 25
;
2005 (2) SA 140
(CC), paragraph 59 and
Standard Bank of South Africa v Saunderson
2006 (2) SA 264
(SCA), paragraph 20). The Magistrates’ Court Act explicitly
recognises such a possibility, and provides for a Magistrate
to make
an order for repayment in instalments (see section 73 of the Act).
This is presumably because judgment debts executable
in the
Magistrates’ Court are smaller and more likely to be capable of
settlement over time. In this case, there is
no evidence before
me that this possibility has been explored.
12
The more fundamental point, however, is that, absent an
application to review or appeal the judgment debt itself, this court
has
limited, if any, power to suspend the money judgment or interfere
with the manner of its settlement. Without such a power, an
application
in this court to execute a Magistrates’ Court money
judgment is more likely to amount to a
fait accomplis
than an
invitation to exercise a discretion.
13
The link between the exercise of the discretion to refuse
execution against a primary residence and the grant or refusal of the
underlying money judgment was recognised by the Full Court in
Absa
Bank v Mokebe
2018 (6) SA 492
(GJ) (“
Mokebe
”).
In that case, the Full Court required that the application for a
money judgment on a mortgage bond and the application
for leave to
execute against mortgaged property being used as a primary residence
should generally be heard and determined simultaneously.
This is in
part because the grant of a money judgment separately from an order
for special execution risks ruling out the possibility
of avoiding
execution by finding other means to pay the debt due (see
Mokebe
,
paragraph 22).
14
In this case, Pinehurst does not seek special execution on a
mortgage bond. It seeks an order declaring Ms. Fouche’s
property
executable because execution against her movables has failed
to satisfy the judgment debt. However, the underlying concerns are
the same. If the money judgment against Ms. Fouche had been sought
and granted in this court, the Judge considering the application
for
leave to execute against Ms. Fouche’s home would at least have
the power, under Rule 45A, to “suspend the operation
and
execution” of the money judgment “for such period as it
may deem fit”. It is not clear to me that the court
has that
sort of power when asked to provide process-in-aid. The basis of an
application for process-in-aid is that the underlying
judgment is
final and not susceptible to interference. In applications to declare
primary residences specially executable, that
assumption does not
hold. It is always at least possible that the money judgments may be
refused or suspended, or that the application
for it could be
postponed in order to give the debtor the opportunity to prevent
execution against their home by repaying the debt
in some other way.
15
For this additional reason, it will seldom be appropriate to
enforce a money judgment granted in the Magistrates’ Court by
asking the High Court for leave to execute against the judgment
debtor’s home.
The
Thobejane
decision
16
Mr. Bava, who appeared for Pinehurst, relied upon the decision
of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Standard Bank v Thobejane
2021 (6) SA 403
(SCA), but that decision is not directly relevant.
Thobejane
is authority for the proposition that this court has
no discretion to refuse to entertain a matter merely because it falls
within
the concurrent jurisdiction of the Magistrates’ Court.
In this case, there is no question of my declining jurisdiction to
entertain Pinehurst’s case. Rather, having accepted
jurisdiction to decide Pinehurst’s application, I decline to
exercise
my discretion in Pinehurst’s favour.
Order
17
For all these reasons, the application is dismissed.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 24 February 2025.
HEARD
ON:
19 February 2025
DECIDED
ON:
24 February 2025
For
the Applicant:
WA Bava
Instructed by Bam
Attorneys
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