Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 237South Africa
Nghonyama and Others v The Body Corporate of Pearlbrook (2018/8948) [2023] ZAGPJHC 237 (16 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011 – section 16 - appointment of administrator - failure to account – termination of appointment.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nghonyama and Others v The Body Corporate of Pearlbrook (2018/8948) [2023] ZAGPJHC 237 (16 March 2023)
Nghonyama and Others v The Body Corporate of Pearlbrook (2018/8948) [2023] ZAGPJHC 237 (16 March 2023)
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sino date 16 March 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case No: 2018/8948
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
DATE:
16 March 2023
In
the application between:
SAINET
NGHONYAMA
First
Applicant
GORDON
EPHRAIM NDLOVU
Second
Applicant
TSAKANI
MARTHA KHOSA
Third
Applicant
EPHRAIM
DHLAMINI
Fourth
Applicant
NATHANIEL
MARTIN ZULU
Fifth
Applicant
and
THE
BODY CORPORATE OF PEARLBROOK
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Heard
:
16 January 2023
Delivered:
16 March 2023 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 16
March 2023.
Summary:
Sectional Titles Schemes Management
Act 8 of
2011 – section 16 - appointment of administrator - failure to
account – termination of appointment.
TURNER
AJ
[1]
On 5 March 2018 the applicants in this
matter, as owners of units in the building known as Pearlbrook,
launched an application in
which they sought the following relief:
“
1.
Pending the finalisation of the matter to be heard under
Part
B
of the application,
JAN
VAN DEN BOS
(the Administrator) is
appointed as Administrator to the respondent for a period of
36
months
from date of appointment in
terms of the provisions of section 16 of Act 8 of 2011 (‘the
Act’).
2.
Provided that in the sole discretion of the Administrator and in his
opinion and belief that it would
be advisable to have the period
shortened and/or extended, the Administrator may apply to the
Honourable Court for leave to do
so, in which events the proposed
election for the appointment of the Board of Trustees referred to
hereunder shall be heard earlier
or later as the case may be.
3.
The Administrator [sic] vested with the powers and obligations as
provided in terms of section 16 of
the Act, which include,
inter
alia
, the right to:
3.1 convene
and preside at the meetings required in terms of this Act and the
Scheme’s Rules;
3.2 lodge
with the Ombud as defined in section 1 of the Community Schemes Ombud
Service Act 9 of 2011 :
3.2.1 copies of the
notices and minutes of meetings; and
3.2.2 written
reports on the administration process every three months or at such
shorter intervals as the court may direct.
3.3 Perform
the functions of the Body Corporate as fully prescribed in section 3
of the Act and to comply with the regulations
and rules of the
Sectional Titles Management Regulations.
…
3.9 To open
and operate an account at a registered commercial bank in the name of
the respondent …
3.10 To keep the
building known as Pearlbrook in a state of good repair …
4. The costs
incurred as Administrator be funded out of the administrative fund of
the respondent and be fixed at a
rate of R450 per hour.
6. A rule
nisi be issued returnable on the [left blank] 2018 where any party
who has any claim shall be entitled to
oppose the grant of final
relief therein …”
[2]
The notice of motion goes on to set out
under the heading “Part B”, that the relief to be claimed
in Part B was –
“
9.
The rule nisi in Part A of the application be confirmed.
10. The
respondent pays the costs of this application alternatively any party
opposing this application be ordered to
pay the costs thereof on an
attorney-and-client scale …”
[3]
It appears that Part A of this 2018
application was unopposed and an order was granted on 1 August 2018.
Strangely, however, the
terms of the main order differed from the
terms of the order sought in Part A of the Notice of Motion. The
remaining relief in
Part A appears to have remained the same as that
set out in the notice of motion. The relevant part of the order read
as follows:
“
JAN
VAN DEN BOS N.O. (‘the Administrator’) is appointed as
Administrator to the respondent for a period from where a
date
obtained from the court’s Honourable Registrar to hear Part B
opposed and/or unopposed, from a final appointment up
to date of
appointment in terms of the provisions of section 16 of Act 8 of 2011
(‘the Act’).”
[4]
There does not appear to have been any
opposition to the application but it is not clear whether the content
of the amended order
was shared with the respondents before it was
presented to the Court and granted. The order having been granted and
notwithstanding
the text of the order, Mr van den Bos relied on the
Part A order to hold himself out and act as administrator after the
order was
granted. Part B of the relief claimed was never set down.
[5]
In January 2022, more than 36 months after
the Part A order was granted, an affidavit was delivered on behalf of
the respondent.
The deponent acknowledged that the answering
affidavit was extremely late and requested condonation. For the
reasons set out below,
I grant condonation for the late filing of the
answering affidavit.
[6]
The crux of the case made in the answering
affidavit is that the members of the respondent have a serious
objection to the permanent
appointment of Jan van den Bos as
administrator. What emerges from the answering affidavit is:
(i)
From the date of the Part A order, Mr van
den Bos has purported to be the “appointed administrator”
asserting that he
has authority to act over Pearlbrook in terms of
powers granted by the 1 August 2018 court order. He did so during the
three-year
period following August 2018 and thereafter up to the
point where the answering affidavit was delivered in January 2022.
(ii)
Mr van den Bos has not carried out the
functions mandated by section 16(4) of the Act, namely:
“
(4)
The administrator must-
(a) convene and
preside at the meetings required in terms of this Act and the
scheme's rules; and
(b) lodge with the
ombud-
(i) copies of the
notices and minutes of meetings; and
(ii) written reports
on the administration process every three months or at such shorter
intervals as the Magistrate's Court may
direct.”
[7]
Mr Mhlanga, who appeared for the
respondent, argued that there were significant difficulties with the
reformulation of prayer 1
of the order (quoted above). Not only did
it differ from the prayer sought in the notice of motion but it is
extremely unclear
as to what was intended. On the interpretation
argued by Mr Mhlanga, the order does not purport to appoint Mr van
den Bos at all
but, rather, to record merely the terms on which he
would be appointed on the return date contemplated in Part B.
[8]
Clearly, Mr van den Bos (and the
applicants) took a different view and conducted themselves on the
basis that the 1 August 2018
order did appoint Mr van den Bos
indefinitely, unless or until Part B was set down and the appointment
was set aside.
[9]
In argument, Mr Kohn who appeared for the
applicants, conceded that Mr van den Bos’ appointment as
administrator could no
longer be valid. Mr Kohn suggested that this
was because 36 months mentioned in the notice of motion had passed
during August 2021.
I agree that Mr van den Bos’ appointment as
administrator can no longer be valid, but I do not agree that it is
merely because
the 36-month period expired during 2021.
[10]
It ought to have been brought to the
court’s attention when the 2018 order was sought that the
provisions of section 16(2)(a)
of the Sectional Title Schemes
Management Act 8 of 2011 requires the court to appoint an
administrator “
for a fixed period
and on such terms and conditions as it deems fit
”
.
These requirements are not met in the order. Further, where the order
which was granted was not granted in terms of the notice
of motion
(which recorded that the appointment would be for 36 months) but in
terms of reformulated relief which did not mention
the 36 months,
there is no basis to rely on the 36 months referred to in the
original notice of motion.
[11]
It is not necessary for me to resolve the
interpretational debate on these matters because, with the
applicants’ counsel’s
concession, it was common cause at
the hearing of the matter that Mr van den Bos cannot continue as
administrator in terms of an
appointment under the above case number.
Consequently, it is necessary for me to make an order discharging the
rule and the relief
granted on 1 August 2018. I confirm that Mr van
den Bos is, as at the date of this judgment, no longer appointed as
administrator
of the respondent – the Body Corporate of
Pearlbrook.
[12]
I must make it clear, however, that having
taken on the mantle of administrator during this extended period and
having collected
monies and purported to act as administrator on
behalf of the Body Corporate, Mr van den Bos remains accountable to
the members
of the Body Corporate and to the Ombud (as contemplated
in clause 3.2 of the order) for everything done during the entire
period
up to the date of this judgment.
[13]
The only issue which was ultimately in
dispute at the hearing of this matter was the issue of costs. Mr Kohn
argued that I should
exercise my discretion in favour of an order
where each party pays its own costs. Mr Mhlanga contends that the
applicants should
pay the costs of the application.
[14]
The applicants did not file a replying
affidavit or heads of argument, the latter despite an order by Mia J
on 5 September 2022
compelling them to do so. No explanation was
given for this non-compliance. Instead, shortly before the hearing,
on 12 January
2023, AM Ellis Attorneys the attorneys for the
applicants, wrote a letter to the respondents alleging vaguely that
“
you have failed to comply with
the Rules of Court which specifically includes the consolidated
practice directives applicable
”
.
The letter then goes on to record:
“
These
deficiencies are fatally defective to the hearing of an opposed
motion and will be presented and argued at the hearing of
the
application at which time an order for costs
de
bonis propriis
will be sought against
your firm should you fail to remove the matter before close of
business 13 January 2023.”
[15]
This letter was uploaded on to Caselines.
This vague and empty threat did not feature at the hearing of the
matter but provides
a glimpse of what appears to have been the
attitude of those instructing Mr Ellis. I suspect that this is less
likely to be the
attitude of the named applicants and more likely the
attitude of Mr van den Bos and his firm PAL Property Management. My
suspicion
was supported by the fact that the same attorney, AM Ellis,
acted for Mr van den Bos and PAL Property Management in a different
matter, unrelated to the current applicants, which was heard in terms
of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act (Case No.
DSOS001285/GP/17)
[Caselines 013-112 at 115]. No doubt Mr van den Bos
and PAL Property Management have an interest in continuing to earn
income from
Pearlbrook.
[16]
The uncontradicted evidence on the
answering affidavit is that, during the period since the 1 August
2018 order was granted; Mr
van den Bos has not held any meetings as
required by the Act (this is in fact confirmed in his attorneys
response to the Rule 35(12)
notice delivered by the respondent); Mr
van den Bos has not disclosed the financials of the respondent
despite requests that he
do so; Mr van den Bos has not provided the
bank statements for the respondent; Mr van den Bos has used the bank
account at Absa
Bank opened for “Pearlbrook” to receive
monies from persons who are unrelated to Pearlbrook. One example of
this was
provided by the respondent which shows that Mr van den Bos,
via PAL Properties, was collecting payments from properties in
Yeoville
into the same account as those received in respect of
Pearlbrook.
[17]
From all of this, it is clear to me that
the respondents have made out a case that Mr van den Bos ought not to
be appointed as administrator
of Pearlbrook.
[18]
It is also clear to me and uncontroverted
on the papers that if the respondent had not delivered its affidavit,
compelled the delivery
of heads and set the matter down, Mr van den
Bos would have continued to act as administrator of Pearlbrook,
notwithstanding that
36 months had elapsed and that no Part B
appointment had ever been made. No doubt a threatening approach such
as that adopted in
the AM Ellis Attorneys letters would also have
been a persistent theme in his engagement with the members of the
Pearlbrook Body
Corporate, to persist with this behaviour.
[19]
In the circumstances, I find that the
respondents are entitled to their costs and that the applicants are
liable for those costs.
I am however alive to the fact that the
applicants may not be individuals of means and that a costs award may
be a significant
imposition upon them.
[20]
I am not in a position to make an order
that other parties (such as AM Ellis Attorneys or Mr van den Bos) pay
the costs
de bonis propriis
as those parties have not been given notice. I do
note the following, however : if the instructions to persist with the
matter and
to conduct the litigation in the way in which it was
conducted were instructions given by the parties other than the
applicants
personally, the applicants may be entitled to recover any
amounts paid out from those who were in fact pursuing the litigation
in their name. As I have no facts in this regard, I express no view
as to whether such a claim would succeed.
[21]
In the circumstances, I make the following
order:
(1)
Part B of the application made by the first
to fifth applicants (the “applicants”) is dismissed and
the rule
nisi,
insofar
as a rule
nisi
was
issued on 1 August 2018, is discharged.
(2)
It is declared that Mr Jan van den Bos is
no longer appointed as administrator of the Body Corporate of
Pearlbrook.
(3)
The applicants are to pay the costs of this
application, jointly and severally, the one paying and the others to
be absolved.
TURNER
AJ
Counsel for the
applicants: Adv
Kohn
Instructed by:
AM
Ellis Attorneys
Counsel for the
respondent: Adv
L Mhlanga
Instructed by:
P
Muleya Inc
Date of hearing:
16 January 2023
Date
of Judgment: 16 March 2023
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