Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 594South Africa
Van Den Bos NO v Maluleke and Others (11192/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 594 (22 May 2023)
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Van Den Bos NO v Maluleke and Others (11192/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 594 (22 May 2023)
Van Den Bos NO v Maluleke and Others (11192/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 594 (22 May 2023)
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sino date 22 May 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:11192/2020
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
22.05.23
In
the matter between
JAN VAN DEN BOS
N.O.
(In his capacity as
Administrator of Pearlbrook Body Corporate)
Applicant
And
MALULEKE,
LIZZY (NEE VAN WYK)
First
Respondent
MALULEKE,
NKENSANI GLADYS
Second
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Third
Respondent
Neutral
Citation:
Jan Van Den Bos N.O
v Maluleke Lizzy (Nee Van Wyk)
(Case
No. 11192/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 594 (22 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
YACOOB
J
:
1.
The applicant approaches this court on the
strength of a judgment obtained against the first and second
respondents in the Johannesburg
Central Magistrates Court on 20
November 2019, for payment of a sum of R27 688,60 and interest,
arising from unpaid levies. He
seeks an order declaring the property
which was the subject of the levies specially executable, together
with a writ of execution.
The execution of the judgment against the
respondents’ movables resulted in a
nulla
bona
return.
2.
The applicant is the administrator of the
sectional title scheme, Pearlbrook, in which the property is
situated. The first and second
respondents are the joint owners of
the property, a mother and daughter, and contend that the property is
their primary residence.
As the third respondent did not participate
in these proceedings, where I refer to “the respondents”,
this means the
first and second respondents.
3.
The respondents raise the following points in
opposition to the application:
3.1.
The applicant lacks
locus
standi
to bring this application as his
administratorship is not yet in force.
3.2.
The applicant should approach the Magistrate’s
Court for an order of special executability.
3.3.
The property is the respondents’ primary
residence, and would be rendered homeless and destitute by the forced
sale of the
property.
4.
The first respondent states in her answering
affidavit that she has been the registered owner with her daughter
since her husband’s
death in 2009, while her husband had
purchased it in 1996. She alleges that she has never been made aware
of any arrears in levies.
The applicant attaches in reply proof of
service by hand of the notice of arrear levies.
5.
The first respondent does not contend that she
paid her levies. Instead she says that the affairs of the body
Corporate were in
disarray and there was no one to pay the levies to.
The first respondent disputes the appointment of the applicant and
contends
that she has not paid levies to him simply because his
appointment is still in dispute. There is no allegation that she is
unable
to pay levies or that levies were incorrectly levied.
6.
The first respondent also alleges that she was not
served with the summons of the magistrates court matter, and only
became aware
of it when the sheriff attempted to execute on the
warrant on 3 March 2020.
7.
However, since that date, the respondents have
made no attempt to set aside the order of the magistrates court,
either by way of
rescission or appeal. That order therefore must
stand and this court cannot interrogate the merits of the order.
8.
The point
in limine
regarding the appointment and
locus
standi
of the applicant has been raised
and determined numerous times in this court. The applicant has
provided to the court five separate
judgments by five different
judges of this court in which the same attorneys raised the same
point
in limine
as
a defence, each time unsuccessfully. I am aware of at least many
more, some anecdotal, and some which have come before more.
9.
All five judgments which deal with the point
in
limine
dismiss it on the basis that,
although the order is not ideally worded, it is clear that the
applicant’s administratorship
has commenced and is valid.
10.
The respondents’ counsel was unable to
demonstrate that all these judges are wrong, nor do I see any reason
to find that they
were wrong. I do not devote any more time to the
point
in limine
save
to say that it clearly has no merit.
11.
This means that the respondents’ contention
that they were not obliged to pay the applicant their levies must
also have no
merit. Of course it will always be open to the
respondents to avoid the sale in execution by paying their
outstanding levies to
the applicant, now that they are aware that
their objection has no merit.
12.
The applicant accepts that it is asking this court
for “process-in-aid” and that this is a discretionary
remedy for
which the applicant must make out a case. The applicant
filed an additional affidavit by his attorney setting out what it
contends
is a proper case for this court to make a finding that the
applicant is unable to obtain the relief it seeks in the magistrate’s
court. It is, essentially, that the magistrates systematically
stonewall applications to declare a property specially executable,
never making a decision one way or the other that could be appealed,
but simply postponing or removing the matter from the roll
on some
pretext or another, including referring it to a section 65 enquiry,
or requiring that section 65 be followed.
13.
The applicant contends that the high court is more
able to give the necessary judicial oversight on a decision such as
this. I disagree.
The magistrates court is perfectly able, and if it
were not, it would not have the power.
14.
The applicant’s attorney also suggests that
if the matters have to go to the magistrates court that will result
in delays
which will result in properties being hijacked.
15.
The applicant’s attorney does not annex any
evidence to his affidavit of properties being hijacked because of
what the magistrates
court does, or any transcripts of the
magistrates court proceedings in which magistrates just arbitrarily
postpone or remove applications
from the roll. Nor is there any
evidence that of a matter that was referred for a section 65 enquiry
arbitrarily.
16.
The applicant’s attorney refers to over 100
matters in which he has successfully obtained judgments declaring
properties specially
executable from this court where the monetary
judgment was granted by the magistrates court.
17.
I do not believe that reference to numbers
necessarily makes out a case. Nor does the filing of a vague and
generalized affidavit.
It is not enough for an applicant to treat the
application as a “box-ticking” exercise. The affidavit in
support of
process-in-aid must substantively make out a case one
which the court can exercise its discretion in the applicant’s
favour.
In my view it does not.
18.
The
applicant acknowledges, correctly, that this is not a question of
jurisdiction as that in
Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited and Others v Mpongo and Others
.
[1]
The
principles in
Mpongo
would
apply were the applicant approaching this court from the beginning.
This is a question of whether process-in-aid is appropriate.
19.
One of
the judgments referred to by the applicant was
Jan
van den Bos NO v Mogoane and Others
[2]
in
which Swanepoel AJ accepted the explanation provided in a so-called
“process-in-aid affidavit” and granted the order.
The
learned judge relied on section 34 of the Constitution to find that
the practice in the magistrates courts described by the
applicant’s
attorney resulted in a deprivation of effective access to courts.
20.
I do not know what exactly was before the court in
the
Mogoane
matter.
I can only decide on what is before me, and whether it is sufficient
to enable to exercise my discretion in the applicant’s
favour.
In this particular matter, it is not.
21.
For these reasons, the application is dismissed
with costs.
S. YACOOB
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel
for the applicant:
N
Lombard
Instructed
by:
Schuler
Heerschop Pienaar Attorneys
Counsel
for the first and second respondents:
D
Ndlovu
Instructed
by:
Precious
Muleya Attorneys
Date of hearing: 08
November 2022
Date of judgment: 22 May
2023
[1]
2021 (6) SA 403 (SCA)
[2]
2022
JDR 2404 (GJ)
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