Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 596South Africa
Body Corporate Assistance Gauteng (Pty) Ltd and Others v Tillman and Others (34372/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 596 (30 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 May 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Body Corporate Assistance Gauteng (Pty) Ltd and Others v Tillman and Others (34372/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 596 (30 May 2023)
Body Corporate Assistance Gauteng (Pty) Ltd and Others v Tillman and Others (34372/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 596 (30 May 2023)
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sino date 30 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
CASE
NO: 34372/2020
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In
the matter between:
BODY
CORPORATE ASSISTANCE
GAUTENG
(PTY) LIMITED
FIRST
APPLICANT
BODY
CORPORATE ASSISTANCE
WESTERN
CAPE (PTY) LIMITED
SECOND
APPLICANT
THE
TRUSTEES FOR THE TIME BEING
OF
CENTRAL SQUARE
THIRD
APPLICANT
And
PHILIP
TILLMAN
FIRST
RESPONDENT
RAN
GOLDSTEIN
SECOND
RESPONDENT
JADE
KRETZMER
THIRD
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation
:
Body
Corporate Assistance Gauteng (PTY)LTD & 2 Others vs Philip
Tillman & Others
(Case No:
34372/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 596(30 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
MIA
J
[1]
In this matter the application initially
sought an interdict against the first to third respondents. After the
first to third respondents
filed their answering affidavits, the
applicant filed a replying affidavit and then amended its request
seeking an interim interdict
and a referral to oral evidence.
[2]
The first applicant according to the
founding affidavit is the chairman of the Board of Trustees of
Central Square Body Corporate
(Body Corporate) and is also the
developer of the complex which includes residential and commercial
units. The first applicant
was authorised by the second and third
applicants to bring the application. The applicants are responsible
for the daily management
of the body corporate affairs which include
the collection of levies for the repair, maintenance and upkeep of
the property. The
three respondents are owners of units in the
Sectional Title Scheme of Central Square Body Corporate.
[3]
The applicant seeks an interdict against
the respondents to protect the employees and personnel of the first
and second applicants
and the third applicant. The applicant alleges
that the respondents have bombarded the applicants and are harassing
them with complaints
in an unacceptable manner which infringes on
their dignity. They are flooded with emails that contain slurs, and
the respondents
demand terminations and resignations of the
applicants and trustees seeking to determine what is right or wrong
and lawful or not.
The respondents threaten to open complaints with
CSOS if the applicants do not comply with the respondents’
demands and their
conduct has instilled fear in the employees who
threatened to resign and have had nervous breakdowns and live in fear
of the respondents.
[4]
The respondents have laid complaints with
CSOS and charges at the South African Police Station. The applicant
referred to intimidation,
long vindictive telephone calls, and abuse
being levelled at personnel employed by the applicant by the
respondents. In particular,
the applicant refers to a manager,
Ms Lourens who they wish to call as a witness being called various
derogatory names. It was
contended that the respondents are making
the sectional title scheme ungovernable. In the founding affidavit,
the applicant states
that a grievance against the managing agent
should be addressed to the body corporate and then continues to state
that the grievance
should be received by the managing agent for
onward transmission to the Trustees. Thus the same person against
whom the complaint
is made is meant to channel the complaint onward.
[5]
The confirmatory affidavit attached from Ms
Lourens did not give details about the abuse levelled at her as it is
merely a confirmatory
affidavit to founding affidavit and the general
the averment. This is disputed by the respondents in their answering
affidavits.
The applicant repeatedly refers to a massive dispute of
fact, however, no emails supporting the defamatory averments were
attached
to the founding affidavit. The allegation was also made that
there were too many calls made to the management rendering the
management
of the facility impossible. This too was disputed by the
respondents. Counsel for the respondents submitted that upon
perusing
the records it appeared that the number of calls the
applicant relied upon and that would be placed before the court
during trial
were in dispute. These records were not attached to the
papers and are not before this court.
[6]
The respondents agree that there is a
dispute of facts. They contend that the applicants have launched
vexatious litigation in an
attempt to prevent the respondents from
exercising their rights and this in turn fails to address the
underlying disputes that
are present at Central Square. Moreover, the
respondents aver that the applicants have not made out a case that
warrants the granting
of interim relief in the form of an interdict.
It was argued that the applicants should have been aware that there
were genuine
and bona fide disputes of fact that would emerge when
they launched this application. The respondents contend that they
have been
polite in their communication. In their view, the
application is akin to a Strategic Law Suit against Public
Participation which
seeks to silence them. Therefore, the respondents
apply for the dismissal of the application with costs on the attorney
and client
scale including the costs of two counsel
[7]
In their amended application and in view of
the disputes raised in the answering affidavits, the applicants
request that the disputes
be referred to oral evidence. This the
applicants contend would enable the trial court to deliberate on the
many disputes and allow
the high level of conflict to be resolved and
to restore peace and harmony to the body corporate. Counsel for the
applicant submitted
that a determination which applied the Plascon
Evans test would not assist in the present matter in view of the
massive disputes
and the volumes of which it has at its disposal
which it seeks to place before the court dealing with the dispute
which have not
been attached to the papers.
[8]
Counsel or the applicant relied on the
decision in
Mamadi and Another v Premier
of Limpopo Province and Others to
refer
the matter to oral evidence referring to the Court’s dictum at
para 44 where the Court stated:
“
This
does not mean that an applicant in a rule 53 application is entitled,
as of right, to have a matter referred to oral evidence
or trial.
General principles governing the referral of a matter to oral
evidence or trial remain applicable. Litigants should,
as a general
rule, apply for a referral to oral evidence or trial, where
warranted, as soon as the affidavits have been exchanged.
Where
timeous application is not made, courts are, in general, entitled to
proceed on the basis that the applicant has accepted
that factual
disputes will be resolved by application of Plascon-Evans. Likewise,
where an applicant relies on Plascon-Evans, but
fails to convince a
court that its application can prevail by application of the rule, a
court might justifiably refuse a belated
application for referral to
oral evidence. A court should however proceed in a rule 53
application with caution.”
[9]
At paragraph 44 in
Mamadi,
the Court notes:
“
This
does not mean that an applicant in a rule 53 application is entitled,
as of right, to have a matter referred to oral evidence
or trial.
General principles governing the referral of a matter to oral
evidence or trial remain applicable. Litigants should,
as a general
rule, apply for a referral to oral evidence or trial, where
warranted, as soon as the affidavits have been exchanged.
Where
timeous application is not made, courts are, in general, entitled to
proceed on the basis that the applicant has accepted
that factual
disputes will be resolved by application of Plascon-Evans. Likewise,
where an applicant relies on Plascon-Evans, but
fails to convince a
court that its application can prevail by application of the rule, a
court might justifiably refuse a belated
application for referral to
oral evidence. A court should however proceed in a rule 53
application with caution. An applicant might
institute proceedings in
good faith in terms of rule 53, in order to secure the advantages of
the rule and on the basis that the
application can properly be
decided by application of Plascon-Evans, only for the respondent to
later show that this is not so.
In these circumstances, provided the
dispute of fact which emerges is genuine and far-reaching and the
probabilities are sufficiently
evenly balanced, referral to oral
evidence or trial, as the case may be, will generally be appropriate”
[10]
The
respondents’ reliance is on SLAPP and an abuse of process. In
Mineral
Sands Resources (Pty) Ltd and Others v Reddell and Others
[1]
the Court noted :
“
The
main thrust of the respondents’ argument is that the existing
doctrine of abuse of process encompasses a SLAPP suit defence
and
that the existing common law allows and requires courts to consider
ulterior motive when assessing whether a litigant has abused
court
proceedings…
According to the
respondents, that case holds that, generally, abuses of process occur
when court processes are used for ulterior
or extraneous purposes.
This finding makes clear that (a) ulterior motives will be
considered; and (b) ulterior motives can be
determinative of abuse of
process”
[11] In the present
matter, counsel for the respondents submitted that the application is
intended to silence the respondents and
to discourage and prevent
them from participating in the meetings or raising concerns
generally. They submit further that they
are also being limited in
their freedom of association in the limitation that they not
associate with other owners or discuss matters
of mutual interest.
Counsel submitted that the files which the applicant seeks to rely on
if the matter were referred to trial
related to matters between the
applicant and other parties and is not relevant to the present matter
with the three respondents.
The papers are not before this court to
make this determination.
[12] In relation to the
request for a referral to oral evidence it is apparent that there are
disputes of fact. I am not persuaded
that the applicant had made out
a case on the papers that an interim interdict be granted. The
prima facie right relates
to particular person and not the juristic
entities. In the
Mineral Resources
matter the court points out
that:
“
The
purpose of the right to dignity is, by its very nature,
'humancentric'. ….. A company was not meant to have
'intrinsic
selfworth', as this court has repeatedly referred to
as the essence of human dignity.”
Moreover, the applicant
is already pursuing alternate remedies. The delay in pursuing the
present matter was as a result of the
applicant pursuing alternative
litigation to prevent the purported harm it suggests is occurring and
was necessary. There has been
a delay of some three years since the
application was launched. The explanation that the applicant was
dealing with other matters
does not address why this matter was not
prosecuted which if moved successfully may have the effect of putting
an end to the other
matters.
[13] I considered the
request to refer the matter in terms of Rule 6(5)(g) which provides:
“
Where
an application cannot properly be decided on affidavit the court may
dismiss the application or make such order as it deems
fit with a
view to ensuring a just and expeditious decision. In particular, but
without affecting the generality of the aforegoing,
it may direct
that oral evidence be heard on specified issues with a view to
resolving any dispute of fact and to that end may
order any deponent
to appear personally or grant leave for such deponent or any other
person to be subpoenaed to appear and be
examined and cross-examined
as a witness or it may refer the matter to trial with appropriate
directions as to pleadings or definition
of issues, or otherwise”.
[14] I have had an
opportunity to consider the submissions made and am of the view that
the matter is better referred to evidence
in totality rather than on
the limited aspect of Ms Louren’s evidence only as initially
directed.
[15] The applicant
however ought to have foreseen the dispute of facts from the outset
and issued summons in the matter.
[16] In view of the above
I make the following order,
1. The matter is referred
to trial with the applicants founding affidavit standing as the
summons and the respondents answering
affidavits standing as the
pleas.
2. The applicant is to
pay the costs of the application on an attorney client scale. The
first, second and third respondents are
to be excluded from paying
the above costs in the event that a levy is raised to pay these
costs.
SC MIA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicants:
Adv
G.H Meyer
Instructed
by
Sean
Brown Attorneys
For
the Respondents:
Adv
M Oppenheimer
Instructed
by
D’Arcy-Hermann
Raney Inc., Schindlers Attorneys and Shaie Zindel Attorneys
Heard: 29 May 2023
Delivered: 30 May 2023
[1]
Mineral
Sands Resources (Pty) Ltd and Others v Reddell and Others
2023(2) SA 404 (CC)
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