Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 366South Africa
Riverlair Body Corporate and Another v Caris Brook Homeowners Association NPC and Others (016149/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 366 (27 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 March 2024
Judgment
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## Riverlair Body Corporate and Another v Caris Brook Homeowners Association NPC and Others (016149/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 366 (27 March 2024)
Riverlair Body Corporate and Another v Caris Brook Homeowners Association NPC and Others (016149/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 366 (27 March 2024)
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sino date 27 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
016149/2022
1. REPORTABLE: NO
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
3. REVISED.
27 March 2024
In
the matter between:
RIVERLAIR
BODY CORPORATE
First
Applicant
THE
OWNERS OF UNITS IN THE RIVERLAIR SECTIONAL TITLE SCHEME
Second
Applicant
and
CARIS
BROOK HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION NPC
First
Respondent
KAREN
BLEIJS N.O.
Second
Respondent
COMMUNITY
SCHEMES OMBUD SERVICE
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
CRUTCHFIELD
J:
[1]
This is a review application brought against paragraphs 41.6 to 41.7
of the adjudication order granted by the second respondent,
Karen
Bleijs N.O., dated 5 March 2022 (‘the adjudication
order’). In terms of the adjudication order:
1.1
The first applicant’s prayer that the first respondent
be ordered to reverse all levies charged to members of the
first
applicant with immediate effect was dismissed; and
1.2
Each and every member of the first applicant was declared
liable to pay levies to the first respondent from 1 January
2020
to date of the adjudication order, alternatively, to make
arrangements to effect such payments on or before 30 April
2022.
[2]
The first applicant is the Riverlair Body Corporate, a body corporate
established pursuant to the provisions of section
38 of Act 95 of
1986, functioning in terms of the Sectional Titles Schemes Management
Act, 8 of 2011 (‘the STSMA’)
and a community scheme as
defined in the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act, 9 of 2011 (‘the
CSOS Act’), situated
at 59 Hornbill Road, Douglasdale, Gauteng.
[3]
The second applicant comprises the owners of units situated in the
Riverlair Sectional Title Scheme identified in the
founding
affidavit.
[4]
The first respondent is Caris Brook Homeowners Association NPC
(Registration No: 1996/017799/09), a non-profit company
duly
registered and incorporated under the company laws, a community
scheme as defined in the CSOS Act.
[5]
The second respondent, Karen Bleijs
N.O.
is an adjudicator in
the employ of the third respondent, appointed in terms of s 21(2)(b)
of the CSOS Act.
[6]
The third respondent is the Community Schemes Ombud Service, a
juristic entity established in terms of the provisions
of s 3(1) of
the CSOS Act.
[7]
The applicants sought the review in terms of s 53 of the CSOS Act.
The applicants brought the application in terms of
the provisions of
the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2002 (‘PAJA’)
together with the principle of legality
in accordance with the
provisions of rule 53 of the uniform rules of court.
[8]
The first respondent opposed the application. The second and third
respondents abided the order of this Court.
[9]
The applicants alleged that the second respondent’s
adjudication order granted in terms of the CSOS Act was a decision
of
a functionary of a juristic person exercising a public function and
that the adjudication order fell, accordingly, within the
meaning of
“administrative action” in terms of s 1 of PAJA.
[10]
The impugned paragraphs of the adjudication order provided in effect
that the second applicant, members of the first
applicant, were
liable for payment of certain levies to the first respondent.
[11]
The applicants alleged that there was no rational basis for the
imposition of the levies by the first respondent on the
second
applicant and thus that the second respondent could not reasonably
have granted such an order in favour of the first respondent.
[12]
The applicants alleged that the adjudication order was materially
influenced by an error of law, that it was made pursuant
to
irrelevant considerations whilst relevant factors were not
considered, and that the portion of the adjudication order under
review was irrational.
[13]
Douglasdale Extension 97 (‘the township’) was established
in terms of the Township Establishment Conditions
proclaimed under
local authority notice 2717 on 9 October 1996 (’the
township’).
[14]
The township comprises various erven, including:
14.1
Erf 1521 on which the Riverlair Sectional Title Scheme
(‘Riverlair’) was developed, consisting of 56 sectional
title units managed and maintained by the first applicant.
14.2
Erven 1522 to 1551 and 1553 to 1574 that are free standing,
individually owned erven in the Caris Brook Estate (‘Caris
Brook’). The latter, Caris Brook, is managed and maintained by
the first respondent.
14.3
Erf 1575, the subject of this application, on which the common
entrance to both Riverlair and Caris Brook together with
the
guardhouse servicing both estates, is situated. Erf 1575 is
registered in the name of the Home Owners Association of Caris
Brook.
[15] The two
estates, the sectional title scheme administered by the first
applicant and the first respondent’s home
owners’
association are both situated within the township.
[16]
In terms of the Conditions for the Establishment of the Township
(‘the Conditions of Establishment’), erf
1575 was to be
jointly owned by the first respondent and the first applicant.
Notwithstanding, erf 1575 is registered in the name
of the first
respondent.
[17]
Access to both Caris Brook and Riverlair occurs using the single
entrance situated on erf 1575. It comprises a guardhouse
and an
entrance gate and is manned 24-hours per day by a security company.
[18] The applicants
contend that the dispute between the parties arose from the
Conditions of Establishment of the Township.
In terms thereof,
the ‘Formation and Duties of the Residents Association’
provide that the first respondent’s
sole responsibility is to
provide ‘for the functioning and proper maintenance of Erf 1575
and the essential services (excluding
the sewer system) contained
thereon.’
[19]
The applicants argue that by virtue of the Conditions of
Establishment every owner of a sectional title unit in Riverlair
was
a member of the first respondent. Notwithstanding, Riverlair and
Caris Brook have been managed and maintained historically
as separate
schemes by the first applicant and the first respondent,
respectively.
[20]
The first applicant collects levies from owners in Riverlair that it
utilises for the purpose of fulfilling its functions
in terms of the
STSMA, including management of the Riverlair estate and the common
areas situated within Riverlair. Similarly,
the first respondent
fulfils essentially the same function in respect of Caris Brook,
collecting levies from the owners for management
of the Caris Brook
estate and the common areas situated therein.
[21]
Other than erf 1575 comprising the common entrance and access road to
and from both estates, Riverlair and Caris Brook
are separately and
independently managed and maintained and have always been so.
[22]
During 2017 and 2020, disputes erupted between the first respondent
and the first applicant in respect of the common
entrance to the two
estates.
[23] During October
2019 or thereabouts, the first applicant registered a caveat against
the units in Riverlair to the effect
that the owners of units in
Riverlair (‘the Riverlair owners’), were members of
the first respondent. The latter,
in turn, demanded that the second
applicant pay levies to the first respondent retrospectively from
1 January 2020 (‘the
impugned levies’), being from
the approximate date when the second applicant became members of the
first respondent.
[24]
The caveat reflected the conditions of notarial deed K201/1997 and
provided the following:
“
Schedule
A
Subject
to the following conditions:
1.
By virtue of a Notarial Deed of servitude K201/1997S the within
mentioned is subject to the following conditions:
(a) Every owner of
the Erf, or any subdivision thereof, or any person who has an
interest therein shall become and shall remain
a member of the Home
Owners Association and be subject to its constitution until he/she
ceases to be an owner as aforesaid. Neither
the Erf nor any
subdivision thereof nor any interest therein shall be transferred to
any person who is not bound himself/herself
to the satisfaction of
such Association to become a member of the Homeowners Association.
(b) The owners of
the Erf or any subdivision thereof, or any person who has an interest
therein, shall not be entitled to
transfer the Erf or any subdivision
thereof, or any interest therein without a clearance certificate from
the Homeowners Association
that the provisions of the Articles of
Association of the Homeowners Association have been complied with.
(c) The term
‘Homeowners Association’ in the aforesaid conditions of
title shall mean the Caris Brook Homeowners
Association – No
96/17799/08, an Association incorporated in terms of Section 21 of
the Companies Act, 61 of 1973 as amended.”
[25]
Accordingly, the caveat provided that every Riverlair unit is and
shall remain a member of the Homeowners Association
of Caris Brook.
[26] The applicants
contended that the impugned levies did not pertain to expenses
incurred in respect of erf 1575 but arose
from expenses related
exclusively to the management of Caris Brook, in respect of which
Riverlair owners were not liable.
[27]
Accordingly, the applicants alleged that no rational basis existed
for the second applicant to have to pay the impugned
levies that fell
to be set aside.
[28]
The applicants contended that the purpose of registering the caveats
was solely for the applicants to gain recognition
in the process of
decision-making pertaining to erf 1575, including the choice of the
security company manning the entrance gate.
This accorded with the
applicants’ admitted obligation to make payment of 50% of the
expenses incurred in respect of the
security company, guardhouse,
gate and road maintenance and repairs, being the costs of erf 1575.
[29] As a result,
during January 2021, the disputes regarding the management of erf
1575 and the impugned levies were referred
to the third respondent in
terms of s 38 of the CSOS Act. That process resulted in the
adjudication order.
[30] The applicants
alleged that the second respondent correctly found that the
Conditions of Establishment provided that
erf 1575 be jointly owned
by the first applicant and the owners of the first respondent but
that erf 1575 was incorrectly registered
in the name of the first
respondent alone. Accordingly. the applicants sought orders in terms
of s 39(1)(c) of the CSOS Act, that
the first respondent’s
decision to impose the impugned levies upon the second applicant was
irrational, unfair, unreasonable
and unlawful, and, that the first
respondent be ordered to reverse all levies charged to the second
applicant with immediate effect.
[31]
The first respondent sought an order that every member of the first
applicant, being the second applicant, be declared
liable to pay the
impugned levies from 1 January 2020, which the second respondent
granted together with alternate relief.
[32]
The grounds upon which the applicants claimed the review of the
adjudication order were that the second respondent erred
in holding
that:
32.1
the first applicant failed to furnish proof of the way in
which the impugned levy was calculated by the first respondent
and
that the first applicant failed to discharge the burden of proof in
respect of that issue;
32.2
the first applicant failed to make out a case for the reversal
of the impugned levies with immediate effect;
32.3
the members of the first applicant, being the second
applicant, were not parties to the adjudication. As a result, the
applicants alleged that the adjudication order was irrational.
[33]
The applicants contended that the only levies that the first
respondent could impose justifiably upon the second applicant
arose
from the joint costs incurred in respect of Erf 1575, that the
impugned levies did not relate rationally to Erf 1575
and were
irrational, unreasonable and unfair as a result thereof. The
applicants allegedly had no say in the imposition of the
impugned
levies, nor in the quantification thereof.
[34] The applicants
argued correctly in my view, that they did not carry the burden of
showing that the levies were incorrectly
calculated as found by the
second respondent. It was for the first respondent to demonstrate the
quantification of the impugned
levies.
[35]
However, the first respondent demonstrated that the applicants had
been invited on various occasions to participate and
contribute to
the quantification of the impugned levies but had failed to do so.
[36]
In so far as the first respondent relied on its Memorandum of
Incorporation, the MOI had not been registered and was
accordingly
not available for the first respondent to rely upon.
DISCUSSION
[37]
It is common cause between the parties that:
37.1 Pursuant to
the registration of the caveat, the Riverlair owners are members of
the Homeowners Association of Caris
Brook.
37.2
Two clearance certificates will be required in order to effect
future transfers of Riverlair units, one from the first
applicant in
compliance with s 15B(3) and one from the first respondent in respect
of the impugned levies.
37.3 The Riverlair
owners are bound by and to the conditions imposed by the Caris Brook
Homeowners Association.
37.4
The road, erf 1575, is owned by the first respondent and used
by the residents of both estates.
[38] Section
1(4)(c) of the Conditions of Establishment provides that the first
respondent is solely responsible for the functioning
and proper
maintenance of erf 1575 and the essential services (excluding the
sewerage system) contained thereon.
[39] Section
1(4)(d) of the Conditions of Establishment provides that:
“
The
Residents Association shall have the legal power to levy from each
and every member the costs incurred in fulfilling its function
and
shall have legal recourse to recover such fees in the event of
default in payment by the member.”
[40]
The first respondent’s functions include those arising from erf
1575.
[41] As a result of
the registration of the caveat, the Riverlair owners are members of
the first respondent and are bound
by the first respondent’s
Conditions of Establishment.
[42] Thus, the
first respondent elected to exercise its responsibility under the
Conditions of Establishment in respect of
erf 1575 by imposing the
impugned levies on its members, including the second applicant from
January 2020, which the first respondent
was entitled to do in terms
of s 1(4)(d) of the Conditions of Establishment.
[43] The applicants
contend that the first respondent being empowered to impose the
impugned levies on the second applicant
as members of the first
respondent, was not a rational reason for the first respondent to do
so. This was particularly given that
the first respondent was
independently managed and obliged to collect levies pertaining to
Caris Brook from the Caris Brook owners.
[44] The impugned
levies comprise a standard levy of R1 266.00 together with an
additional levy of R195.00 totalling
some R1 461.00 per month
per Riverlair unit. The impugned levies are additional to those
levies charged by the first applicant
of its members, the second
applicant, and, are also additional to the applicants’ existing
monthly contributions towards
the costs of the guardhouse, the
security company and the maintenance and upkeep of the gate,
guardhouse and road, of which the
applicants pay fifty per centum
(50%).
[45]
The applicants alleged
and the first respondent agreed that the costs involved in the
functioning and maintenance of Erf 1575 and
the essential services
(excluding the sewerage), did not include costs pertaining to Caris
Brooke.
[1]
[46]
The first respondent alleged that it owned and managed the road at
its expense and that the costs incurred in doing so
were not limited
to the guardhouse, entrance gate and security services and included
the expenses comprising the impugned levy.
[47]
According to the first respondent, the impugned levies comprised
administration fees, audit fees, gardening services,
insurances,
legal fees, refuse removal, repairs and maintenance, salaries and
wages, telephone and water charges in respect of
Erf 1575.
[48]
Whilst the first applicant’s intention in registering the
caveat was to procure voting rights in decisions concerning
the
security company manning the joint entrance to the two estates, the
consequences of the registration of the caveat were
not limited
thereto.
[49] Those
consequences included the Riverlair owners being members of the first
respondent and being bound by the first respondent’s
Conditions
of Establishment. Pursuant thereto, the second applicant is liable
for the impugned levies imposed by the first respondent
in respect of
erf 1575.
[50]
Thus, the impugned levies relate to erf 1575, payment of which the
second applicant is liable for pursuant to its membership
of the
first respondent.
[51]
The impugned levies follow on the second applicant’s membership
of the first respondent. It is important to note
that the
adjudication order includes provision that a
pro rata
levy is
to be calculated and levied, and that only costs factually shared by
the second applicant and the first respondent should
be paid
pro
rata
by the members of the first respondent including auditing
fees of the homeowners association, management fees and legal
costs
inter alia
. The first respondent has invited the
applicants to engage on the calculation of the impugned levy.
[52]
The Conditions of Establishment permit the first respondent to impose
and enforce the impugned levies against members
of the first
respondent.
[53]
It follows from the second applicant’s membership of the
first respondent that it is liable for payment of the
impugned levies
with effect from January 2020, pursuant to registration of the
caveat.
[54]
In the circumstances, there is no basis upon which I can find that
the adjudication order of the second respondent is
irrational,
unreasonable, unfair or stands to be set aside.
[55]
There is no reason why the costs of the application should not follow
the order on the merits. However, this matter does
not warrant a
punitive costs order against the applicants as contended by the first
respondent.
[56]
By reason of the above, the application is dismissed with costs.
I
hand down the judgment.
CRUTCHFIELD
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of the
judgment is deemed to be 27 March 2024.
FOR
THE FIRST AND SECOND APPLICANTS: Mr F A Ferreira
INSTRUCTED
BY: Cox
Yeats Attorneys
FOR
THE FIRST RESPONDENT: Ms
R Andrews
INSTRUCTED
BY: Hengst
& McMaster
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
25 October 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
27 March 2024
[1]
Caselines
001-33 para 29; Caselines 006-13 para 41.
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