Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 611South Africa
Bogatsu and Another v 108 on 8th Street Homeowners Association (A2022/037938) [2024] ZAGPJHC 611 (28 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 September 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Bogatsu and Another v 108 on 8th Street Homeowners Association (A2022/037938) [2024] ZAGPJHC 611 (28 June 2024)
Bogatsu and Another v 108 on 8th Street Homeowners Association (A2022/037938) [2024] ZAGPJHC 611 (28 June 2024)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEAL
NO: A2022-037938
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
28
June 2024
In
the matter between:
GEORGE
GOTHUSAMANG
BOGATSU
1
st
Appellant
MAHLAPANE
JEANETTE
BOGATSU
2
nd
Appellant
and
108
ON 8
TH
STREET HOMEOWNERS
ASSOCIATION
Respondent
Judgment
Mdalana-Mayisela
J (Strydom J concurring)
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal from Randburg Magistrate Court
against the judgment of the Additional Magistrate W Jansen delivered
on 26 September
2022. The appellants are the owners of Unit 2[…]
on Erf 2[…], N[…], extension 6[…], M[…],
Gauteng.
The respondent is 108 on 8
th
Street Homeowners Association, Noordwyk, Midrand, Gauteng.
Background facts
[2] The respondent
instituted two actions against the appellants in the trial court. In
the first action the respondent claimed
an amount of R23 383.92
for monthly contributions, CSOS levy and ancillary charges for the
period between 17 July 2015 to
8 October 2017. In the second action
it claimed an amount of R45 439.00 for monthly contributions,
CSOS levy and ancillary
charges for the period between 1 November
2017 to 8 March 2021.
[3] The appellants
defended both actions and filed their respective pleas. In the second
action the appellants raised the special
pleas of jurisdiction and
lis alibi pendens
.
[4] By agreement between
the parties the two actions were consolidated, and the consolidated
action proceeded to trial. The trial
court dismissed the special
pleas. It ordered the appellants to pay to the respondent the amounts
of R23,388.92 and R45,439.00
plus interest, and legal costs on an
attorney and client scale, the one paying the other to be absolved.
The grounds of appeal
[5]
The appellants have lodged this appeal against the
whole judgment of the trial court.
Briefly, t
he
grounds of appeal stated in the notice of appeal are as follow:
[5.1]. The trial court
erred in fact and/or in law in not finding that the respondent lacked
the locus standi to approach the court;
[5.2] The trial court
erred in fact and/or in law in finding in favour of the respondent
where the respondent did not have a properly
adopted constitution;
[5.3] The trial court
erred in fact and/or in law in granting monetary order in favour of
the plaintiff where there is no documentary
source of authority to
charge the levy; and
[5.4] The trial court
erred in fact and/or in law in dismissing the special pleas.
Applicable law
[6]
It is trite that this court’s powers to interfere with the
findings of fact of a trial court are limited. In the absence
of any
misdirection, the trial court’s conclusion, including its
acceptance of a witness’ evidence, is presumed to
be correct.
In order to succeed on appeal, the appellants must therefore convince
us on adequate grounds that the trial court was
wrong in accepting
the witness’ evidence. A reasonable doubt will not suffice to
justify interference with its findings.
Bearing in mind the advantage
a trial court has of seeing, hearing and appraising a witness. It is
only in exceptional cases that
this court will be entitled to
interfere with a trial court’s evaluation of oral testimony.
[1]
Jurisdiction
[7] The appellants have
taken a point that the trial court do not have jurisdiction to
entertain the action. In the special plea
filed in the second action
they pleaded that:
“
1.1
Section 38(1) of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act, No 9 of
2011, (“the CSOS”) reads as follows: “Any
person
may make an application if such person is a party to or affected,
materially by a dispute.”
1.2 The plaintiff is a
party to or who is affected materially by a dispute and therefore the
aforesaid section is applicable to
the plaintiff.
2. Therefore, in the
light of the above, this matter does not fall within the jurisdiction
of the above Honourable Court but falls
within the jurisdiction of
the Community Schemes Ombudsman.”
[8]
The appellants in support of their contention relied on the case
of
Body Corporate of Via Quinta v Van der Westhuizen NO and Anothe
r,
where the Court stated that:
[2]
“
[18]
If, on the other hand, the amount of the levy is disputed because it
was not properly determined and this dispute is raised
after the
defaulter had received a demand, the appropriate forum for recovery
of the levies would be the original office of the
Ombud service. An
adjudicator would then be appointed to investigate the matter and his
order would be enforceable is a judgment
of the magistrates’
court or the high court with jurisdiction. The Body Corporate would
then need to execute
the order in
the court concerned to recover the levies if the order so records
.
”
[9] The respondent in its
replication denied that the trial court has no jurisdiction by virtue
of the provisions of section 38(1)
of the CSOS Act. It submitted that
section 38(1) provides an alternative dispute resolution mechanism,
which affords it an election
and/or discretion as to the forum in
which any dispute stands to be adjudicated. The language used in
section 38(1) is permissive
and not mandatory. Neither section 38(1),
nor the CSOS Act read as a whole, excludes the jurisdiction of the
court to adjudicate
on the pending action or excludes its common law
right to institute its action in a court of law.
[10] The trial court
dismissed the special plea of jurisdiction on the basis that the
provisions of section 38(1) of the CSOS Act
are not mandatory.
[11] In the notice of
appeal the appellants contended that the trial court erred in
dismissing the special plea of jurisdiction.
It ought to have found
that it had no jurisdiction to entertain the claims whose cause is,
per statute, allocated to another forum.
[12] In the appeal the
appellants also relied on
Body Corporate of Via Quinta
supra
to support their contention. In my view the reliance on the
Body
Corporate of Via Quinta
case is misplaced. Paragraph [18] of that
case referred to a scenario where the amount of the levy is disputed
because
it was not properly determined
. In the appeal before
us, the appellants are disputing payment of the levy on various
grounds, including that the respondent was
not legally established
and its constitution was not properly adopted. In paragraph [17] of
that case the court stated as follows:
“
If
the claim for arrears levies or contributions is not disputed, for
example if an owner simply ignores a demand for payment or
simply
refuses to pay, without disputing the amount of the claim or the
proper determination of the levy, the Body Corporate can
institute
legal action in court to recover the arrear levies from the owner.”
[13]
Section 38(1) of the CSOS Act provides that any person
may
make an application if such person is a party to or affected,
materially by a dispute. In considering the interpretation of section
38(1), I am guided by the Supreme Court of Appeal decision in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[3]
where it was stated that:
“
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading the
particular provision or provisions in the light of the document
as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into existence.
Whatever the nature of the document, consideration must
be given to
the language used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and
syntax; the context in which the provision appears;
the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and the material known to those
responsible for its production. Where more than one
meaning is
possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of all these
factors.”
[14]
The point of departure is the language of the section 38(1) provision
itself, read in context and the purpose of the CSOS Act.
The
word “may” in a provision in an enactment usually
indicates a permissive and enabling provision, giving the person
who
exercises it a discretion. However, in all cases the meaning will
depend upon the context of the provision and the intention
embodied
in the enactment.
[4]
When the
word “may” is read in the context of section 38(1)
provision, it affords any person who is a party to or affected,
materially by a dispute, an election to make an application at CSOS.
The wording of this section is not peremptory. It does not
expressly
state that the exhaustion of CSOS remedies is an indispensable
condition precedent to launching an application to court.
In the
Body
Corporate of Via Quinta
supra paragraph [15] the Court held that:
“
[15]….
In terms of the CSOSA the Body Corporate has a discretion to either
enforce payment of levies or contributions through
the Ombud, or in
terms of its common law right in any court of law[4] against a
defaulting owner for their recovery of arrear levies….”
[15]
I agree with the decision in the Body Corporate of Via Quinta that
the CSOS Act does not expressly or impliedly exclude the
jurisdiction
of the Magistrate court. The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Makhanya
v University of Zululand
[5]
explained the concept of concurrent jurisdiction in relation to
statutes as follows:
“
When
a statute confers judicial power upon a special court it will do so
in one of two ways. It will do so either by (a) conferring
power on
the special court and simultaneously (b) excluding the ordinary power
of the High Court in such cases (it does that when
‘exclusive
jurisdiction’ is conferred on the special court). Or it will do
so by conferring power on the special court
without excluding the
ordinary power of the High Court (by conferring on the special court
jurisdiction to be exercised concurrently
with the original power of
the High Courts). In the latter case the claim might be brought
before either court.”
[16] For the reasons
stated above, I agree with the respondent’s submission that
section 38(1) provides an alternative dispute
resolution mechanism,
which affords the party affected by the dispute in matters relating
to home schemes, an election and/or discretion
as to the forum in
which such dispute stands to be adjudicated. The trial court
correctly dismissed the special plea of jurisdiction.
This ground of
appeal must fail.
Locus Standi
[17] In their notice of
appeal, the appellants contended that the respondent has no
locus
standi
to approach the court because it was not properly
registered in terms of the law, and therefore not legally existent
for the purposes
prescribed by law.
[18]
The general rule is that it is for the party instituting proceedings
to allege and prove its
locus
standi
,
and the onus of establishing it, rests on that party. It must
accordingly appear
ex
facie
the founding papers that the party has the necessary legal
standing.
[6]
[19] The respondent in
its amended particulars of claim filed in both actions averred that
it is a common law Homeowners Association
established in terms of its
constitution and it has the authority to institute legal proceedings
in terms of clause 17.18 of the
constitution.
[20] Clause 17.18 of the
constitution provides that:
“
The
Association shall be entitled to demand, sue or recover any arrear
levy instalment or other amount due to the Association by
a Member by
instituting action against him in any Magistrate’s Court having
jurisdiction in respect of such levy or such
other amount to which
jurisdiction Members are deemed to have consented in terms of Section
45 of the Magistrate’s Court
Act. These provisions shall not
preclude the Association from instituting proceedings in any other
court which may have jurisdiction
in respect of the claim or person
of the Member concerned.”
[21] In the plea filed in
the first action, the appellants admitted that the respondent is a
common law Homeowners Association and
that it has authority to
institute legal proceedings in terms of clause 17.18 of its
constitution. In the plea filed in the second
action, the appellants
denied that fact and put the respondent to the proof thereof.
[22] During the trial
when the first appellant was cross-examined about the contradiction
in the pleas relating to the establishment
and locus standi of the
respondent, he admitted that the respondent is a Homeowners
Association established in terms of its constitution
and that it has
authority to institute legal proceedings in terms of clause 17.18 of
the constitution.
[23] The second appellant
did not testify during the trial. The admission of the respondent’s
locus standi in the respondents’
plea in the first action and
the admission made by the first appellant during his testimony in
court is dispositive of the locus
standi issue.
[24] The respondent’s
managing director Audun Steen Stenersen testified that the N[…]
extension 6[…] township
was established in terms of the Local
Authority Notice 1308 published in the provincial gazette No 136 of
23 May 2007. The aforesaid
notice was admitted as evidence in the
court a quo and marked exhibit 1. It contained the following
declaration:
“
In
terms of Section 103 of the Town Planning and Townships Ordinance,
1986 (Ordinance 15 of 1986) the City of Johannesburg, hereby
declares
N[…] E[…] 6[…] township to be an approved
township subject to the conditions set out in the Schedule
hereto
.”
[25] The conditions of
establishment were:
[25.1] The applicant
shall properly and legally constitute a Resident’ association
to the satisfaction of the local authority
prior to or simultaneous
with the sale of the first erf of the township;
[25.2] Each and every
owner of erven 2743 – 2745 and 2747 – 2795 shall become a
member of the residents’ association
upon transfer of the erf;
and
[25.3] The residents’
association shall have full legal power to levy from each and every
member the costs incurred in fulfilling
its function and shall have
legal records to cover such fees in the event of default by the
member.
[26] Stenersen testified
that the respondent was established as a Resident’s association
in accordance with the aforesaid
conditions, and it is registered as
such with the Community Schemes Ombud Service under Registration No.
CSOS/REG/16/GP/007088.
His testimony in this regard remained
unchallenged.
[27]
The first appellant during his cross-examination introduced new
issues stating that the respondent was not established as a
section
21 company and no finance committee was established, and therefore,
the conditions imposed by the Local Authority were
not complied with.
These issues were not pleaded by the appellants. Their plea in the
second action contained a bare denial in
relation to the
establishment and locus standi of the respondent. It is trite that
the parties are bound by their pleadings. It
is impermissible to
plead one particular issue and seek to pursue another at the trial.
The court itself is as much bound by the
pleadings of the parties as
they are themselves. It is no part of the duty or function of the
court to enter upon any enquiry into
the case before it other than to
adjudicate upon the specific matters in dispute which the parties
themselves have raised by their
pleadings.
[7]
[28] For these reasons, I
find that the respondent has established that it has the
locus
standi
to institute the actions against the appellants. The court
a quo’s finding on this issue was correct. The ground of appeal
that the respondent lacked locus standi to institute the actions
against the appellants is without merit and it must fail.
Lis Alibi pendens
[29] The appellants
submitted that there is pending application between the same parties
and based on same cause of action and in
respect of the same subject
matter in that it involves payment of levies at CSOS. The special
plea of
lis alibi pendens
was filed only in the second action.
The submission on the pending application is not applicable to the
first claim.
[30] The respondent
argued that the submission by the appellants is factually incorrect,
and not supported by the documentary evidence.
In the application to
CSOS the appellants sought an order to be provided with the list of
records and itemized billing of monthly
levies, and for a declarator
that the refusal to provide same was unfair and arbitrary. In the
second action the respond claimed
an amount of R45,439.00 for monthly
contributions, CSOS levy and ancillary charges for the period between
1 November 2017 to 8
March 2021. The relief sought in the CSOS
application is not the same as the one sought in the second action.
[31] The trial court
dismissed the special plea of
lis alibi pendens
on the basis
that the period in which the arrear amounts are claimed, differ. It
seems that the trial court misunderstood the special
plea of
lis
alibi pendens
to be about the two actions instituted by the
respondent in court, instead of the second action in court and the
application before
CSOS. I agree with the decision of the trial court
dismissing the special plea of
lis alibi pendens
but for a
different reason.
[32]
There are three requirements for a successful reliance on the defence
of
lis
alibi pendens
.
They are: the litigation is between the same parties, the cause of
action is the same, and the same relief is sought in both sets
of
proceedings.
[8]
As stated in
paragraph [32] above, the relief sought in the second action and the
application to CSOS is not the same. Therefore,
the appellants have
failed to prove a defence of
lis
alibi pendens
.
This ground of appeal is unsustainable, and it must fail.
Constitution and
Resolution
[33] I deal with the
adoption of constitution and resolution for the imposition of levies
together, as they are closely interlinked.
The appellants contended
that the trial court erred in finding for the respondent and granting
monetary judgment against them,
in circumstances where the respondent
did not have a properly adopted constitution and a resolution for
imposition of levies adopted
in terms of a valid constitution. They
submitted that the constitution is of no force and effect, and that
they are not bound by
it.
[34] It is common cause
that the appellants became the registered owners of unit 27, on Erf
2[..], N[…] Extension 6[..] on
17 July 2015. N[…]
Extension 6[…] township consists of a total of 58 units. The
units are double-story dwellings.
There is a roadway, and guards are
posted at the main entrance. The main purpose of a homeowner’s
association is to protect
the interests of owners, security, and
maintenance of the township.
[35] Stenersen testified
that the respondent’s constitution was drafted by Henkel
Gregory Attorneys and accepted by the developer
of the township,
Jimal Properties CC. It was approved and adopted at the respondent’s
first meeting on 21 April 2015. Thus,
before the appellants became
members of the respondent. It was the only and current constitution
of the respondent. The appellants
did not tender evidence showing
that the constitution was not adopted. Stenersen’s evidence in
this regard remained undisputed
and had to be accepted as true. The
trial court made a credibility finding that he was an honest and
impressive witness. I accept
that the constitution was adopted.
[36] I now deal with the
issue of whether the appellants are bound by the constitution. The
first appellant during his testimony
admitted the offer to purchase
and title deed documents. In terms of the conditions recorded in
those documents, the appellants
became members of the respondent upon
the registration of unit 27, shall remain members, and be subject to
the respondent’s
constitution until they cease to be owners of
unit 27. The first appellant conceded that the conditions in the
title deed mean
that he is bound by the constitution. The second
appellant did not testify during the trial. The ground of appeal that
the appellants
are not bound by the constitution has no merit and
must fail.
[37] The appellants
contended that the trial court erred in granting monetary judgment in
favour of the respondent without documentary
source of authority to
charge levies. I have accepted that the respondent’s
constitution was adopted. Clause 17.2 of the
constitution authorizes
the respondent to levy and administer contributions upon members for
the purpose of meeting all the expenses
which it has incurred or
which are reasonably anticipated to be put in the pursuance of its
objects and whether by way of maintenance,
repair, improvement, and
keeping the land in good order and conditions of the roads, swimming
pool, reception and/or security building,
parking area, the common
areas, the facilities and services of the respondent or for payment
of all rates and other charges payable
by the respondent in respect
of any land so vested in it, and/or for the services rendered to it
or by it, and/or for payment of
salaries and/or wages of the
employees of the respondent and generally for the payment of the
expenses necessarily and reasonably
incurred in connection with the
management of the respondent.
[38] The first appellant
conceded during his testimony that he is obliged to pay levies. He
admitted that he received the email
from Estie Lewis dated 30 August
2015 explaining how the levies were calculated on the estimated
running costs of the township.
After receiving the aforesaid email,
he sent the email to Lewis requesting the statement of account and
bill of costs. On 3 September
2015 he received the email responding
to his request. In that email it was explained to him that every year
a budget is compiled
for the financial year and every owner
contributes to the levy fund. The copy of the approved budget for
that financial year as
well as the monthly levy amount per unit
contribution was attached to the email. He conceded that all the
information he needed
was contained in the budget. But he never paid
the levies. He kept on asking for more documents relating to the
calculation of
levies. He was provided with all those documents, but
he never paid. The copies of all those emails were admitted as
exhibits in
the trial court. The ground of appeal that there was no
documentary evidence before the trial court is without merit.
Conclusion
[39] I have considered
all the grounds of appeal, and in my view they are unsustainable. In
light of what was stated in
S v Francis
supra, this court has
no power to interfere with the findings made by the trial court in
the absence of a misdirection. Accordingly,
the appeal must fail.
With regard to the issue of costs, the respondent has asked for
costs. It is successful and it is entitled
to costs of the appeal.
ORDER
[40] The following order
is made:
1.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
MMP
Mdalana-Mayisela J
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
JJ
Strydom J
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
(
Digitally
delivered by uploading on Caselines and emailing to the parties)
Date
of delivery: 28
June 2024
Appearances:
On
behalf of the Appellants: Adv
M A Makhubedu
Adv
R Baloyi
Instructed
by: Frank
Setati Attorneys
On
behalf of the Respondent: Adv A Vorster
Instructed
by: Scalco
Attorneys
[1]
S v Francis and Another (95/89) ZASCA 141;
[1991] 2 ALL SA 9
C (26
November 1990)
[2]
(A196/2017)
[2017] ZAFSHC 215
(16 November 2017) para [18]
[3]
[2012] 2 ALL SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) (16 March 2012)
para [18].
[4]
Lynch v Union Government 1929 AD 281.
[5]
2010 (1) SA 62
(SCA) para 25.
[6]
Gross v Pentz
[1996] 4 ALL SA 63
A
[1996] ZASCA 78
; ,
1996 (4) SA 617
(A); Mars
Inc v Candy World (Pty) Ltd 1991(1) SA 567 (A).
[7]
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998 (1) SA 836
(W) at 898 F-J; Home
Talk Developments (Pty) Ltd v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
(225/2016)
[2017] ZASCA 77
(2 June 2017) at paras 28-29; Minister of
Agriculture and Land Affairs and Another v De Klerk and Others
[2014] 1 ALL SA 158
(SCA) at para 39.
[8]
Electrolux South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Rentek Consulting (Pty) Ltd
unreported (19664/2022) WC
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