Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 786South Africa
Body Corporate Sandton View v Mathews and Others (2021/50854) [2024] ZAGPJHC 786 (19 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 July 2024
Headnotes
on 18 February 2019 by the Second Respondent, the Sheriff, after judgment was given against the Defendant, Bishwood CC. While the First Respondent is the Applicant in the recission before me, the parties will be referred to as they were in the main Application.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Body Corporate Sandton View v Mathews and Others (2021/50854) [2024] ZAGPJHC 786 (19 July 2024)
Body Corporate Sandton View v Mathews and Others (2021/50854) [2024] ZAGPJHC 786 (19 July 2024)
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sino date 19 July 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2021/50854
1.
REPORTABLE: Yes☐/ No ☒
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes☐ / No ☒
3.REVISED:
Yes ☐ / No ☒
19
July 2024
In
the matter between:
THE
BODY CORPORATE SANDTON VIEW
APPLICANT
And
MATHAI
JUNIOR MATHEWS
FIRST
RESPONDENT
THE
SHERIFF, RANDBURG SOUTHWEST
SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, PRETORIA
THIRD
RESPONDENT
In
Re:
THE
BODY CORPORATE SANDTON VIEW
PLAINTIFF
And
BISHWOOD
CC
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS AJ
#
# Background
Background
[1]
This is an opposed application for the rescission of a judgment
granted by Mia J on 18 January 2023. The history of the
matter
relates to certain properties the First Respondent bought at a sale
in execution held on 18 February 2019 by the Second
Respondent, the
Sheriff, after judgment was given against the Defendant, Bishwood CC.
While the First Respondent is the Applicant
in the recission before
me, the parties will be referred to as they were in the main
Application.
[2]
The First Respondent purchased four properties through a sale in
execution, held on 18 February 2019 by the Second Respondent,
pursuant to a judgment granted against the Defendant (Bishwood cc).
The conditions of sale stipulated that the purchaser (First
Respondent) is responsible for payment of all costs and charges
necessary to effect the transfer, including the amounts required
by
the Municipality to issue a clearance certificate and the levies due
to the Body Corporate. The estimated arrear rates and taxes
were
indicated in the contract, together with a disclaimer that there will
not be any claim against the Sheriff or the Applicant
if the arrears
are greater than estimated.
[3]
Despite the demand, the First and Second Respondents failed to comply
with the obligations as per conditions of sale.
This prompted the
Applicant, the Body Corporate, to launch an application against the
First Respondent during 2020, to declare
the Conditions of Sale
valid, binding, and enforceable, and for an order that the First
Respondent make payment of the arrear rates
and taxes due to the City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality. This application was
granted in January 2021 by Crutchfield
J (then AJ). The First
Respondent then paid R184 788,65 to obtain clearance for the rates
and taxes. He also gave a guarantee regarding
the anticipated levy
clearance certificate. There was thus compliance with the conditions
of sale in March 2021. After obtaining
the clearance certificate, the
transaction could be lodged with the Registrar of Deeds.
[4]
However, the First Respondent, in the meantime, sold unit 38 to a
third party. Since the transfer to the First Respondent
and the Third
Party had to occur simultaneously, the lodgement had to be suspended
until the other conveyancers could attend to
the transfer. There was
a further delay because of the allocation of the exclusive use areas,
as the four properties are not transferred
to the First Respondent on
one notarial deed only.
[5]
By the time this delay was attended to, the rates clearance
certificate held by the conveyancers had expired. There was
also a
problem with obtaining the original title deed. When the conveyancers
received the extended rates clearance figures, they
forwarded it to
the First Respondent, who ignored it. They then sent a letter of
demand demanding payment of the extended arrears
in the sum of R190
372, 22, stating that should this not be paid in seven days, an
application would be launched to compel the
First Respondent to pay.
[6]
A second payment application (the “main application”) was
thus launched on 25 October 2021, requesting the
payment of the
arrear rates and taxes. The First Respondent served a Notice of
Intention to Oppose on 10 November 2021 and, on
1 December 2021,
served a counter-application and answering affidavit and a notice in
terms of Rule 41A(2)(b). The counter-application
essentially asked
that the Applicant pay the City of Johannesburg and effect transfer
of the properties, failing which the conditions
of sale in execution
be cancelled.
[7]
The Applicant filed a notice of intention to oppose the
counter-application and delivered an answering affidavit. A replying
affidavit was filed on the same day. A rejoinder affidavit followed
this, as well as a notice to amend, together with a Rule 30
notice
(served by the First Respondent). In June 2022, the Applicant served
its heads of argument on the First Respondent. The
First Respondent’s
attorneys then withdrew as attorneys of record.
[8]
The First Respondent did not serve their heads of argument. This
compelled the Applicant to launch an application to force
the First
Respondent to file its heads of argument. This application was
personally served on the First Respondent. The current
attorneys came
on record as attorneys for the First Respondent. The order to compel
the First Respondent to file their heads of
argument was granted on 6
October 2022 by Carrim AJ, granting the First Respondent five days to
file its heads of argument, failing
which the Applicant can approach
the court for their defence to be struck out. This court order was
served to the First Respondent’s
attorney by email and by hand;
they did not file their heads of argument within five days.
[9]
The Applicant then obtained a date for the hearing of 18 January 2023
for an Application to strike out the defence and
opposition of the
First Respondent (the “interlocutory application”). The
notice of set down for this application was
served on the First
Respondent’s attorney by email and by hand. There was further
correspondence about the hearing date.
[10]
One day before the hearing, the First Respondent’s attorney
informed the Applicant’s attorney that they would
deliver their
heads of argument by 8:00 on 18 January 2023. It failed to do so.
They also did not appear at the hearing. Thus,
Mia J granted the
order to strike out the defence and opposition and requested the
First Respondent to pay the arrear rates and
taxes and sign the
documents required to effect the transfer of the properties.
[11]
The order was delivered by hand to the First Respondent’s
attorney on 2 February 2023, along with a letter of demand.
On 12
February 2023, the First Respondent served its rescission
application, seeking to rescind the Mia J order (the “rescission
application”).
[12]
The First Respondent provides the following reasons for his absence.
Two CaseLines profiles were created for the case,
and his attorneys
were added to the wrong CaseLines profile that did not show the
set-down date of the matter. Even if they received
the notice of set
down per email, they assumed that, since there was no activity on the
CaseLines profile since June 2022, the
case is not proceeding as
proper set down also requires an up-to-date CaseLines profile. During
argument, counsel stated that the
promise for the delivery of the
heads of argument related to the main application, not the
interlocutory application.
[13]
After the order was given, the First Respondent’s attorneys
were added to the CaseLine profile for the interlocutory
application
that served before Mia J. Moreover, Mia J was not alerted to the
first CaseLines profile, which contained important
documents such as
the notice of intention to oppose the main application, the counter
application, related documents, and other
important annexures.
[14]
The First Respondent points out that the Applicant offers no
explanation for the creation of two CaseLines profiles or
why the
attorney was only invited to the second profile after the order was
given. Furthermore, if Mia J had been admitted to the
first CaseLines
profile, she would not have been granted the order. The fact that
there was a “compliance affidavit”
on the second
CaseLines profile stating, falsely, under oath, that there is no
other or duplicate CaseLines profile in the matter
and that all the
necessary parties had been invited to the CaseLines profile before
her, created the wrong impression that what
served before her were
the only documents to consider. The Applicant also did not prefix the
profile as “duplicate”,
as per court directives.
[15]
The First Respondent sets out the following defences:
i.The applicant’s
locus standi. The crux of this argument is that the First Respondent
bought four properties in the Applicant’s
sectional title
scheme at a judicial sale in execution. At the sale, a contract came
into existence between the Sheriff (the Second
Respondent), who gave
effect to the court order, and the First Respondent, as the purchaser
of the properties. The execution creditor
is not a party to such a
contract and does not have locus standi to enforce the conditions of
the sale. This is in line with Rule
43(11) of the Magistrates’
Court Act or Rule 46(11) of the Uniform Rules of the Court, which
gives authority to the Sheriff
to act as if they are the owners of
the properties. It is thus for the Sheriff to enforce the conditions
of sale.
ii.The First Respondent
cancelled the agreement due to the increase in the costs of the sale
by the Applicant after the sale in
execution. There was a
counter-application that sought cancellation of the agreement on
these grounds.
iii.The
quantum
of the judgment is not due since R 180 431,36 of the arrears –
due to the municipality – had previously been paid.
This was
not disclosed to Mia J. An order was given on an amount that was thus
not due and payable.
iv.The application to
strike out a defence due to failure to deliver heads of argument is
not applicable in motion proceedings,
as the affidavits contain both
a pleading and the evidence necessary to sustain it. The court cannot
just ignore the affidavits
and dismiss a claim. Clauses 9.8.2.12 and
9.8.2.12 of the practice manual does not simply displace the court’s
general duty
to apply its mind to the evidence before it. The fact
that the Applicant sought the order as granted only based on
non-compliance
with the practice manual, without referring the court
to the First Respondent's defences as on the record, means that there
was
no exercise of judicial discretion in granting the application to
strike out the First Respondent’s defence and that the judgment
should be rescinded on that ground.
[16]
At the
hearing, the parties indicated that they sought rescission in
accordance with common law. An order can be rescinded based
on the
common law on the following grounds:
[1]
i.Fraud;
ii.Justus error;
iii.In certain
exceptional circumstances when new documents have been discovered,
iv.Where judgment is
granted by default;
v.In other
circumstances, based on justice and fairness.
[2]
[17]
I am satisfied that based on the fact that Mia J did not have access
to all the relevant papers in the main application,
including the
notice of intention to oppose, the affidavits relating to that, and
the counter application, there is a Justus error,
an excusable
mistake. Furthermore, it is unjust and unfair to have a matter
adjudicated on, where all the relevant documents are
not before the
court. There is thus a ground for a rescission. The question is
whether the First Respondent complies with the requirements
of
succeeding with the rescission application.
[18]
At common
law, the court has the power to rescind a judgment obtained on
default of appearance if the party seeking the rescission
can provide
sufficient cause for rescission. This is the same as the requirement
for good cause under Rule 31(2)(b). What this
entails was set out in
Chetty v
Law Society, Transvaal
,
[3]
namely
The
term “sufficient cause” (or “good cause”)
defies precise or comprehensive definition, for many and various
factors require to be considered. But it is clear that in principle
and in the long-standing practice of our courts two essential
elements of “sufficient cause” for rescission of a
judgment by default are
(i) that the party
seeking relief must present a reasonable and acceptable explanation
for his default and
(ii) that on the
merits such party has a bona fide defence which, prima facie, carries
some prospect of success.
It
is not sufficient if only one of these two requirements is met; for
obvious reasons a party showing no prospect of success on
the merits
will fail in an application for rescission of a default judgment
against him, no matter how reasonable and convincing
the explanation
of his default. And ordered judicial process would be negated if, on
the other hand, a party who could offer no
explanation of his default
other than his disdain of the rules was nevertheless permitted to
have a judgment against him rescinded
on the ground that he had
reasonable prospects of success on the merits.
[19]
Similarly, in terms of Rule 31(2)(b), an applicant must show good
cause for rescission by giving a reasonable explanation
for his
default, show that the application is brought bona fide, and show
that there is a
bona fide
defence, including a
prima facie
case on the merits. In other words, this court must determine whether
there was a reasonable explanation for the default and whether
there
is a
bona fide
defence.
[20]
Creating two CaseLines profiles, with the First Respondent’s
attorneys not invited to the second profile created
for the
interlocutory application, led to an injustice to the First
Respondent. While the notice of set down may have been emailed
to the
First Respondent, on a balance of probabilities, the lack of activity
on the CaseLines profile created the impression that
the matter is
not properly set down for hearing. The First Respondent’s
explanation, considered holistically, is reasonable
and acceptable.
[21]
This leaves me with the second question: whether, on the merits, the
First Respondent has a bona fide defence that, prima
facie, carries
some prospect of success.
[22]
Recently,
in
Body
Corporate of Marsh Rose v Steinmuller
,
[4]
the Supreme Court of Appeal confirmed that when property is sold in
execution, contracts come into existence between the sheriff,
who
gives effect to the court order and the purchaser whose bid is
accepted. The execution creditor is not a party to the contract.
The
obligation to pay the purchase price and the monies and comply with
the conditions of sale rests upon the purchaser. Thus,
the sheriff is
empowered to do anything necessary to effect transfer registration.
[23]
Ivoral
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Sheriff, Cape Town, and Others
,
[5]
it was held that
When
a Sheriff disposes of property in pursuance of a sale in execution he
acts as an ‘executive of the law” and not
as an agent of
any person. When a Sheriff, as part of the execution process, commits
himself to the terms of the conditions of
sale, he, by virtue of his
statutory authority, does so in his own name and may also enforce it
on his own. A sale in execution
of immovable property entails two
distinct transactions namely, the sale itself and the passing of
transfer pursuant thereto. Although
Uniform Rule 46 does not
specifically empower a Sheriff to institute proceedings in order to
enforce the contract embodied in the
conditions of sale, such power
is implicit in the duty to see that transfer is passed and the
provisions of Uniform Rule 46(13)
which impose an obligation upon him
to do anything necessary to effect registration of transfer. If that
were not so the Sheriff’s
only remedy, in the event of a
purchaser failing to carry out any of his or her obligations under
the conditions of sale, would
be to approach a Judge in Chambers for
the cancellation thereof in terms of Uniform Rule 46(11) and would
allow recalcitrant purchasers
at sales in execution to avoid their
obligations almost with impunity.’
[24]
These cases clarify that the right to transfer the property arises
from a contract and that the rights operate between
the purchaser and
the sheriff, not the body corporate. It is for the sheriff to
determine whether the conditions of sale have been
met, and if not,
it is for the sheriff to enforce the contractual obligations of the
cancel the sale. Prima facie, there seems
to be a bona fide defence
that carries some prospects of success. There is thus, on the face of
it, a
bona fide
defence.
[25]
The First
Respondent states other considerations are at play when striking out
a defence in motion proceedings. This was recently
captured by Wilson
J in
Capitec
Bank Limited v Mangena
[6]
when he said [own emphasis]:
5 Motion
proceedings are different. Every affidavit in motion proceedings
contains both a pleading and the evidence necessary
to sustain it.
When a court is asked to dismiss a claim or strike out a defence for
failure to file heads of argument promptly,
it does so once all the
evidence thought necessary to sustain the claim or defence has been
placed before it.
It seems to me that, in these circumstances, a
court is not at liberty simply to ignore the affidavits and to
dismiss a claim or
strike out a defence merely because one of the
parties has failed to take an important procedural step.
The
court must go further, and satisfy itself that, on the evidence
before it, the claim or defence sought to be dismissed or struck
out
has no intrinsic merit.
6 […]
The
failure to file heads of argument does not make relevant evidence
irrelevant. Nor does it mean that the substantive law applicable
to
the application in question no longer applies. Accordingly, the duty
to consider whether a claim or defence is meritorious in
itself
before dismissing it or striking it must, in my view, apply in all
application proceedings.
[26]
The First Respondent thus has a
bona fide
defence in this
respect, too.
[27] In
the absence of having access to all the court documents, and not
being able to consider the fact that there were already
amounts paid
to cover arrear rates and taxes, as well as not being aware of the
counter application, there is prima facie a bona
fide defence there
too. This needs to be considered in the main application, with due
regard to the pleadings and the evidence.
It is not for this court to
decide.
[28]
In conclusion: The First Respondent provided a reasonable explanation
for his non-appearance and raised some bona fide
defences that, on
the face of it, have prospects of success. The rescission application
should thus succeed.
[29] The
First Respondent argued that the attorneys were aware of two
CaseLines profiles. Instead of alerting Mia J to it and
acting in
terms of the Practice Directives, they moved the application.
Moreover, they did so by filing a compliance affidavit
under oath,
which was patently false. The First Respondent states that under such
circumstances, the reasonable thing to do would
be to allow the
application to proceed unopposed. Instead, they opposed it, causing
delays in the matter. They ask for costs on
a punitive scale.
[30]
The administration of justice relies on attorneys doing their work
diligently. The court should be able to rely on affidavits
deposed by
attorneys that state that there are no duplicate files and that all
parties have been invited. The fact that the compliance
affidavit was
incorrect, and despite that, there was persistence in opposing the
rescission. In my view, it is something that warrants
costs on a
punitive scale.
# Order
Order
[31]
I, therefore, make the following order:
1. The rescission
application succeeds, and the judgment and orders granted by Mia J on
18 January 2023 under case number
2021/50854 are rescinded.
2. The Applicant is
to pay the costs of an attorney and own client scale.
WJ
DU PLESSIS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines and sending
it to the
parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the applicant:
Mr
Strydom
Instructed
by:
Biccari
Bollo Mariano Inc Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondent:
Mr DT
Maritz
Instructed
by:
FJ
Swartz Attorneys
Date
of the hearing:
20
May 2024
Date
of judgment:
19
July 2024
[1]
De
Wet and Others v Western Bank Ltd 1979 (2) SA 1031 (A)
[2]
Swadif (Pty) Ltd v Dyke NO
1978 (1) SA 928
(A).
[3]
1985
(2) 756 (A) at 764J, reference omitted.
[4]
2023
JDR 4180 (SCA) para 21.
[5]
2005
(6) SA 96
(C) para 66.
[6]
2023
JDR 0779 (GJ).
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