Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 16South Africa
Body Corporate of Le Grande Bernard Sectional Scheme v Van Der Linde (A3043/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 16 (25 January 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Body Corporate of Le Grande Bernard Sectional Scheme v Van Der Linde (A3043/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 16 (25 January 2022)
Body Corporate of Le Grande Bernard Sectional Scheme v Van Der Linde (A3043/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 16 (25 January 2022)
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sino date 25 January 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
A3043/2021
Reportable
NO
Of
interest to other Judges NO
Revised
Date:
25/01/2022
In
the matter between:
THE
BODY CORPORATE OF LE GRANDE
Appellant
BERNARD
SECTIONAL SCHEME
And
RIENET
VAN DER
LINDE
Respondent
J
U D G M E N T
MAIER-FRAWLEY
J:
Introductory
background
1.
The
appellant (applicant
a
quo
)
brought an application in the Randburg Magistrates court in terms of
s 66(1) of Act 32 of 44 (‘the Act’) read with
Rule 43A
[1]
for an order,
inter
alia
,
declaring an immovable residential property belonging to the
respondent specially executable (‘the application’).
The
application was not opposed by the respondent (defendant
a
quo
).
2.
On 6 April
2021, the presiding magistrate dismissed the application, with no
order as to costs. This appeal lies against the whole
of the judgment
of the court below.
3.
The appellant is the Body Corporate of Le Grande
Bernard Sectional
Scheme, a sectional title scheme established in terms of the
Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act, 8 of 2011.
The respondent is
one of its members and the owner of an immovable residential property
which forms part of Le Grande Bernard Sectional
Scheme run and
controlled by the appellant.
4.
The application was brought in consequence of the
Sheriff having
issued a
nulla bona
return pursuant to an unsuccessful attempt
by the appellant to execute against the movable property of the
respondent after obtaining
default judgment against the respondent in
respect of unpaid arrear levies and related charges owing to the
appellant.
5.
The record reveals that two separate judgments (by
default) were
obtained in favour of the appellant against the respondent pursuant
to two separate actions being instituted for
payment of arrear levies
and charges. Neither action was defended by the respondent. The first
judgment, which was obtained on
22 November 2018, was for payment of
the sum of R13,215.67. The second judgment, which was obtained on 15
July 2019, was for payment
of the sum of R15,710.30, with the
aggregate total outstanding judgment debt amounting to R28,925.97.
6.
At the time that execution against the movable property
of the
respondent was attempted on 19 March 2019 by the Sheriff, the
respondent was residing at the immovable property described
as
section 65 (being door 65) Le Grand Bernard, 40 Ballyclare Drive
Bryanston, Sandton-North (‘the property’). On that
occasion, when payment of the first judgment debt was demanded by the
Sheriff, the respondent indicated to the Sheriff that she
had no
money or disposable property with which to satisfy the judgment debt.
However, by the time that the application in question
was served by
the sheriff at the property on 12 January 2021, the Sheriff”s
return indicates that the property was found
to be ‘
vacated
and empty
.’
7.
The application was brought by the appellant in
a further attempt to
recover monies due and owing to it by the respondent and, at the very
least, to avoid further prejudice being
suffered by other members of
the appellant having to carry the cost of the respondent’s
ongoing failure to meet her monthly
obligations to the body
corporate. Unpaid levies had continued to accrue after the grant of
default judgment and by the time the
application was brought, the
amount of unpaid levies owing by the respondent exceeded an amount of
R80,000.00. The appellant alleged
in its founding papers that it has
a duty to protect and act in the best interest of its collective
members apropos ‘the
maintenance and up-keeping of the building
known as Body Corporate of the Le Grande Bernard Sectional Scheme’,
same being
a statutory duty in terms of section 3 of the Sectional
Titles Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011 and that ‘it is to the
extreme
detriment and prejudice of the Applicant and its members when
one member fails to make her
pro rata
contribution to the
levies, contributions and other charges’.
8.
The papers reveal that the property was bonded to
Nedbank. At the
time of the application, the bond liability amounted to
R1 609 115.11, whilst the outstanding liability
to COJ was
R28 019.86. The market value of the property was approximately
R1,450 000.00 with an expected high of R1.74 million
and an expected
low of R1.32 million.
Judgment
of court below
9.
At the conclusion of oral argument presented on
behalf of the
appellant at the hearing of the application, the learned magistrate
provided the following reason for dismissing
the application: “
After
having read the papers and after having gone through the statement
from the bondholder, the statement from the City of Johannesburg
and
having regard to the amount of the
[respondent’s]
debt,
…the property, if sold, will never be able to cover the debt.
I do not think it will even cover the outstanding bond
let alone the
City of Johannesburg’s fees. For those reasons the application
is dismissed. I am making no order as to cost.
(sic)”
10.
The presiding magistrate later provided written
reasons in terms of
Rule 51(1) for why she dismissed the application. These included
that:
10.1. The
court record reflected that the property will sell at a loss,
demonstrated mathematically, as follows:
Value of property per
affidavit and annexures:
R1,450 000.00
Minus outstanding bond
(per annexure ‘NC1’)
R1 609 115.11
Minus outstanding debt to
COJ
R28 019.86
Equals:
-
R187 134.97
10.2. She
(magistrate) understood the purpose of a Rule 43A application to be
‘a step in the successful recovery
of a debt through the sale
of an immovable property’;
10.3. ‘The
mathematical calculation set out above demonstrates empirically that
this will not be achieved.’
Issue
on appeal
11.
The issue for consideration in the appeal is whether,
given the
factual circumstances of the case, it was permissible for the learned
magistrate to refuse to grant the application solely
on the basis
that she was of the opinion that the sale of the property in
execution would not result in effective recovery of debts
owed to the
preferent creditor (Nedbank), the appellant and the City of
Johannesburg.
12.
The applicant’s argument is essentially that
(i) the
recoverability of the debt owed to the preferent creditor and (ii)
the amount of the proceeds to be recovered at a sale
in execution,
are issues to be considered at the stage of the sale in execution and
not when adjudicating the s 66 application.
Similarly, so the
argument went, Rule 43A contains no requirement ‘that the court
must consider the prospect of recoverability
as a deciding factor in
adjudicating the application’, rather, it is merely one of
several factors to be taken into account
by the court when
considering whether a reserve price should be set.
Discussion
13.
Rule 43A of the Magistrates Court rules deals with
execution against
residential immovable property. It applies whenever an execution
creditor seeks to execute against the residential
immovable property
or the primary residence of a judgment debtor. Rule 43 on the other
hand deals with execution against immovable
property other than the
residential immovable property or primary residence of a judgment
debtor and provides that save where immovable
property has been
declared specially executable, execution shall not issue against
immovable property until the movable property
of the judgment debtor
has first been excussed and found to be insufficient to satisfy the
judgment or order of court
or
such
immovable property has been declared to be specially executable by
the court.
14.
The following sub-rules of Rule 43A and Rule 43
and sub-sections 1
and 2 of
section 66
of the
Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944
,
are relevant to the issue on appeal:
‘
RULE
43A
EXECUTION AGAINST RESIDENTIAL IMMOVABLE PROPERTY
(1)
This rule applies whenever an execution creditor seeks to execute
against the residential immovable property of a judgment debtor.
(2)
(a)
A court considering an application under this rule must —
(i)
establish whether the immovable property which the execution creditor
intends to execute against is the primary residence of
the judgment
debtor; and
(ii)
consider alternative means by the judgment debtor of satisfying the
judgment debt, other than execution against the judgment
debtor's
primary residence.
(b)
A court shall not authorise
execution against immovable property which is the primary residence
of a judgment debtor unless the
court,
having
considered all relevant factors
,
considers that execution against such property is warranted.
(c)
The registrar or clerk of the court
shall not issue a warrant of execution against the residential
immovable property of any judgment
debtor unless a court has ordered
execution against such property.
(5)
Every application shall be supported by the following documents,
where applicable, evidencing —
(a)
the market value of the immovable
property;
(b)
the local authority valuation of the
immovable property;
(c)
the amounts owing on mortgage bonds
registered over the immovable property;
(d)
the amount owing to the local
authority as rates and other dues;
(e)
the amounts owing to a body
corporate as levies; and
(f)
any other factor which may be
necessary to enable the court to give effect to subrule (8):
Provided
that the court may call for any other document which it considers
necessary.
(8)
A court considering an application under this rule may —
(a)
of its own accord or on the
application of any affected party, order the inclusion in the
conditions of sale, of any condition which
it may consider
appropriate;
(b)
order the furnishing by —
(i)
a municipality of rates due to it by the judgment debtor; or
(ii)
a body corporate of levies due to it by the judgment debtor;
(c)
on good cause shown, condone —
(i)
failure to provide any document referred to in subrule (5); or
(ii)
delivery of an affidavit outside the period prescribed in subrule
(6)
(d)
;
(d)
order execution against the
primary residence of a judgment debtor if there is no other
satisfactory means of satisfying the judgment
debt
;
(e)
set a reserve price;
(f)
postpone the application on such terms
as it may consider appropriate;
(g)
refuse the application if it has no
merit;
(h)
make an appropriate order as to
costs, including a punitive order against a party who delays the
finalisation of an application
under this rule; or
(i)
make any other appropriate order.
(9)
(a)
In an application under this rule, or upon submissions made by a
respondent, the court must consider whether a reserve price is
to be
set.
(b)
In deciding whether to set a reserve
price and the amount at which the reserve is to be set, the court
shall take into account —
(i)
the market value of the immovable property;
(ii)
the amount owing as rates or levies;
(iii)
the amounts owing on registered mortgage bonds;
(iv)
any equity which may be realised between the reserve price and the
market value of the property;
(v)
reduction of the judgment debtor's indebtedness on the judgment debt
and as contemplated in subrule (5)
(a)
to
(e)
,
whether or not equity may be found in the immovable property, as
referred to in subparagraph (iv);
(vi)
whether the immovable property is occupied, the persons occupying the
property and the circumstances of such occupation;
(vii)
the likelihood of the reserve price not being realised and the
likelihood of the immovable property not being sold;
(viii)
any prejudice which any party may suffer if the reserve price is not
achieved; and
(ix)
any other factor which in the opinion of the court is necessary for
the protection of the interests of the execution creditor
and the
judgment debtor.
(c)
If the reserve price is not achieved
at a sale in execution, the court must, on a reconsideration of the
factors in paragraph
(b)
of
this subrule and its powers under this rule, order how execution is
to proceed.
(d)
Where the reserve price is not
achieved at a sale in execution, the sheriff must submit a report to
the court, within 5 days of
the date of the auction, which report
shall contain —
(i)
the date, time and place at which the auction sale was conducted;
(ii)
the names, identity numbers and contact details of the persons who
participated in the auction;
(iii)
the highest bid or offer made; and
(iv)
any other relevant factor which may assist the court in performing
its function in paragraph
(c).
(e)
The court may, after considering the
factors in paragraph
(d)
and
any other relevant factor, order that the property be sold to the
person who made the highest offer or bid.
RULE 43
EXECUTION
AGAINST IMMOVABLE PROPERTY
(1)
(a)
Subject
to the provisions of
rule
43A
,
no warrant of execution against the immovable property of any
judgment debtor shall be issued unless —
(i)
a return has been made of any process issued against the movable
property of the judgment debtor from which it appears that
the said
person has insufficient movable property to satisfy the warrant; or
(ii)
such immovable property has been declared to be specially executable
by the court.
(5)
Subject to
rule
43A
and any order made by the court, no immovable property which is
subject to any claim preferent to that of the execution creditor
shall be sold in execution unless —
(a)
the
execution creditor has caused notice of the intended sale,
corresponding substantially with
Form
34
of
Annexure 1, to be served upon —
(i)
preferent creditors personally;
(ii)
the local authority, if the property is rated; and
(iii)
the body corporate, if the property is a sectional title unit;
calling
upon the aforesaid entities to stipulate within 10 days of a date to
be stated, a reasonable reserve price or to agree in
writing to a
sale without reserve, and has provided proof to the sheriff that such
entities have so stipulated or agreed, or
(b)
subject to the provisions of section
66(2)
(b)
of the Act, the sheriff is satisfied that it is impossible to notify
any preferent creditor, in terms of this rule, of the proposed
sale,
or such creditor, having been notified, has failed or neglected to
stipulate a reserve price or to agree in writing to a
sale without
reserve as provided for in paragraph
(a)
within the time stated in such
notice.
SECTION 66
MANNER
OF EXECUTION
(1)
(a)
Whenever a court gives judgment for the payment of money
or
makes an order for the payment of money in instalments,
such
judgment, in case of failure to pay such money forthwith,
or such
order in case of failure to pay any instalment at the time and in the
manner ordered by the court,
shall be enforceable by execution
against the movable property and, if there is not found sufficient
movable property to satisfy
the judgment or order
, or the court,
on good cause shown, so orders,
then against the immovable
property of the party against whom such judgment has been given or
such order has been made
.
(2)
No immovable property which is subject to any claim preferent to that
of the judgment creditor shall be sold in execution unless—
(a)
the judgment creditor has caused
such notice in writing of the intended sale in execution to be served
personally upon the preferent
creditor as may be prescribed by the
rules; or
(b)
the magistrate or an additional or
assistant magistrate of the district in which the property is situate
has upon the application
of the judgment creditor and after enquiry
into the circumstances of the case, directed what steps shall be
taken to bring the
intended sale to the notice of the preferent
creditor, and those steps have been carried out, and unless
(c)
the proceeds of the sale are
sufficient to satisfy the claim of such preferent creditor, in full;
or
(d)
the preferent creditor confirms the
sale in writing, in which event he shall be deemed to have agreed to
accept such proceeds in
full settlement of his claim.’
(emphasis added)
15.
What can be
gleaned from the provisions quoted above is that where execution is
sought to be levied against the residential immovable
property of a
judgment debtor, a warrant of execution cannot be issued without
judicial oversight and an order obtained from court
permitting such
execution. In deciding whether or not to order execution, a court is
required to have regard to all relevant circumstances.
[2]
Examples of such circumstances are listed by the authors, Jones and
Buckle,
[3]
which include whether
the rules of court have been complied with; whether there are other
reasonable ways in which the judgment
debt can be paid; whether there
is any disproportionality between execution and other possible means
to exact payment of the judgment
debt; the circumstances in which the
judgment debt was incurred; attempts made by the judgment debtor to
pay off the debt; the
financial position of the parties; the amount
of the judgment debt; whether the judgment debtor is employed or has
a source of
income to pay off the debt; or any other factor as may be
relevant to the particular case.
[4]
16.
In
Kgomo,
[5]
a full
bench of this division had occasion to consider the provisions of
Rule 43A in so far as it distinguishes between residential
immovable
property which constitutes the primary residence of the judgment
debtor and residential property which does not. The
court held that
the purpose of Rule 43A ‘
is
to ensure that
while
a judgment debtor is obliged to liquidate its
(sic)
debt
and a court is required to assist a judgment creditor from
(sic)
recovering
its monies
,
this endeavour is undertaken in a manner that, as far as it is
possible, the primary residence of the judgment debtor remains
protected. It is only to be utilised to relinquish the debt when all
other avenues have been exhausted. In other words,
Rule
43A is there to protect the primary residence of the judgment debtor,
it is not there to assist it from avoiding its legal
duty to
relinquish the debt. The protection is over the primary residence and
not any other residence of the judgment debtor
.”
(emphasis added)
17.
It is
apparent from a reading of the record that the learned magistrate did
not undertake the peremptory enquiry contemplated in
Rule 43A(2)(a)
before dismissing the application. There is nothing in the judgment
of the court below (or the magistrate’s
written reasons) that
indicates that she endeavoured to establish at the hearing of the
application whether the property in question
constituted the
respondent’s primary residence or not. Therein the court below
erred. The court record
prima
facie
indicates that the property was not the primary residence of the
respondent at the time the application was adjudicated, although
it
comprised residential immovable property as envisaged in rule 43A.
Furthermore, the property was hypothecated to Nedbank (bondholder)
who held a preferent claim to that of the body corporate as judgment
creditor.
[6]
18.
It further appears from the judgment and the written
reasons provided
by the learned magistrate that her sole reason for dismissing the
application was that she considered that the
proceeds of the intended
sale in execution would not be sufficient to satisfy the preferent
creditor’s claim in full (as
contemplated in s 66(2)(c) of the
Act) without, however, considering the provisions of s 66(1)(a) or
66(2)d) or the Act. The facts
established that a court had previously
given judgment in favour of the appellant for the payment of money by
the respondent, which
money had not been paid to the appellant. No
sufficient movable property was found by the Sheriff with which to
satisfy the judgment
debt and the money judgment was therefore
enforceable against the respondent’s property, subject to the
court’s authorisation,
in terms of s 66(1)(a). In my view, the
learned magistrate put the proverbial cart before the horse by
concluding that the intended
sale in execution would not realise
sufficient proceeds to pay the respondent’s indebtedness to the
preferent creditor (and
other creditors such as COJ and the Body
Corporate). I say this for reasons that follow.
19.
In
Firstrand
Bank
,
[7]
the Supreme Court of Appeal considered the interaction between s
15B(3)
(a)
(i)
(aa)
of
the Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986 (STA)
[8]
and s 66(2) of the Act.
The
body corporate applied to the High Court for an order declaring that
the bank, as bondholder over the unit in question, did
not enjoy a
claim preferent to the body corporate’s claim as judgment
creditor in respect of arrear levies and related costs
and that the
provisions of s 66(2) of the Act were inapplicable. In addition, it
sought an order directing the sheriff to transfer
to and register the
unit in the name of the purchaser who had purchased it at a sale in
execution on 12 February 2000.
The
issue for consideration on appeal was whether the respondent's claim
as judgment creditor in respect of arrear levies and related
costs
due by an owner of a dwelling unit in a sectional title development
was
preferent
to
the claim of the appellant as holder of a mortgage bond over the unit
in question. The appeal court reasoned that ‘
The
practical effect of the statute
[STA]
is
that, assuming the availability of funds, a body corporate will be
paid before transfer of immovable property is effected.
A
reasonable mortgagee and body corporate might arrive at an
accommodation where there are insufficient funds available to cover
the total of the debts owing to both parties - but neither is obliged
in law to do so
.’
(own emphasis) The Supreme Court of Appeal held that ‘the
bank's claim as mortgagee is preferent in terms of the
provisions of
s 66(2) of the MC Act. The body corporate consequently did not have
the right to sell the unit in question in execution
without reference
to the security afforded to the bank by the mortgage bond.
20.
Rule 66(2)(a) provides for a notice to be given
to the preferent
creditor ‘as prescribed by the rules’. The relevant rule
is 43(5)(a), which requires a notice corresponding
substantially with
Form 34 of Annexure 1 to be served,
inter alia
, upon the
preferent creditor and the local authority. Form 34 informs the said
part/ies, amongst others, of the fact that the immovable
property was
laid under judicial attachment and of the date of the scheduled sale
in execution. It further calls upon the party/ies
to stipulate a
reasonable reserve price or to agree in writing to a sale without
reserve. In other words, the notice comes after
or follows upon
judicial authorisation of a sale in execution. It is in this context
that the body corporate has to have reference
to the security
afforded to the bank by the mortgage bond. Likewise, registration of
transfer cannot be effected after a sale in
execution without the
preferent creditor’s claim being satisfied in full or the
preferent creditor having agreed to compromise
its claim or ‘arrive
at an accomodation’ that may possibly allow for recovery of the
body corporate/judgment creditor’s
claim.
21.
In
Demetriou,
[9]
the
Gauteng High Court applied the dictum in the Firstrand Bank case
[10]
to the effect that immovable property that was subject to any claim
preferent to that of the judgment creditor should not be sold
unless
the requirements listed in section 66(2)(
a
)-(
d
)
were met, and held that where
the
purchase consideration at an intended sale was not sufficient to
cover the preferent creditor’s debt, the judgment creditor
was
obliged in terms of s 66(2) to seek the written consent of preferent
creditor for the conditions of sale to be valid and binding.
If such
consent is refused, the property cannot be legally sold.
The court reasoned that
the
provisions of s 66(2) are to the effect that, for a judgment creditor
who attached immovable property that is subject to a preferent
claim
of another party to sell such property, he or she must:
(i)
Follow the steps in either s
66(2)(
a
)
or (
b
)
in notifying the preferent creditor of the intended sale;
(ii)
Ensure that the property is sold
for an amount out of which the debt owing to the preferent creditor
will be paid in full.
(iii)
Where, for some or another reason, the
property cannot attract an amount that will settle the preferent
creditor’s claim in
full, the judgment creditor cannot sell the
property without obtaining the written consent of the preferent
creditor.
22.
The upshot
of the
Demetriou
judgment is that w
here
an auction sale of an immovable property is concerned in terms of the
Act, practitioners should take the necessary precautions
to ensure
that either a reserve price is obtained from a preferent creditor, if
any, before a sale in execution is proceeded with
or that consent is
obtained from the preferent creditor authorising a sale in execution
at a price lower than the indebtedness
owed to the relevant preferent
creditor.
[11]
23.
I agree
with the appellant that the presiding magistrate erred in dismissing
the application solely on the basis that she was of
the opinion that
the sale of the property in execution would not result in effective
recovery of debts owed to the preferent creditor
(Nedbank),
(including the appellant and COJ) when regard is had to the judgments
mentioned above, which acknowledge that the judgment
creditor may
well negotiate and ‘reach an accommodation’ as to the
amount of proceeds to be recovered at the sale in
execution for
purposes of determining the recoverability of the preferent
creditor’s claim (either in full or for a lesser
amount) and
hence the possibility of recoverability of the judgment creditor’s
claim before registration of transfer. This
may also include
negotiation between affected parties and a solution to the impasse
reached even to the extent that certain rights
are consensually
waived insofar as recoverability is concerned.
[12]
In doing so, the presiding magistrate tied the proverbial hands of
the appellant in so far as: (i) its rights of enforcing a judgment
granted in its favour and any prospect of recovery of the judgment
debt were concerned; (ii) not allowing the appellant to utilise
the
full ambit of its remedies and concomitantly unjustifiably limiting
the rights of the appellant; and (iii) allowing a situation
whereby a
recalcitrant debtor will be able to remain in occupation (or retain
ownership of his or her immovable property that is
not a primary, ad
infinitum) despite not paying the judgment debt, or any accumulated
arrear monthly liabilities owed to the body
corporate or without the
appellant being afforded recourse, if circumstances require, to the
provisions of Rule 43A(9)(e).
24.
At the risk
of repetition, as appears from the record, the presiding magistrate
failed to establish whether or not the property
was the primary
residence of the respondent and failed entirely to consider the
provisions of Rule 43A(9)(a) and (b), which provisions
are
peremptory.
[13]
Whether or not
the court below considered or applied the provisions of Rule 43A(8)
remains unclear, as the judgment makes no mention
of the factors
listed therein.
25.
The principles elucidated in Mokebe
supra
are in my view equally applicable to applications brought in the
Magistrates’ court in terms of s 66 of the Act read with
Rule
43A, as in
casu
.
Having regard to
Mokebe
,
the following guiding principles are relevant to applications in
terms of s 66 of the Act read with Rule 43A:
(i)
The court is obliged to set a reserve price, after considering
the provisions of Rule 43A(9)(a) and Rule 43A(9)(b), in respect of
an
application in terms of in terms of Section 66(1) of the Act, where
the facts of the matter so require and where the property
to be
declared specially executable is the primary residence of the debtor.
By parity of reasoning, the court may grant an application
in terms
of Section 66(1) of the Act read with Rule 43A without setting a
reserve price where the property sought to be declared
specially
executable comprises residential immovable property or the primary
residence of the judgment debtor, where the facts
so require;
(ii)
Where a
reserve price to be set exceeds the value of the property to be
declared specially executable, such as to denude
any
equity which may be realised between the reserve price and the market
value of the property (
such
factor being relevant to the decision as to whether or not a reserve
price should be set) the court may still grant the application
where
other considerations relevant to the grant of an order declaring the
property specially executable (alluded to earlier in
the judgment)
warrant the grant of such an order.
[14]
26.
In the circumstances and for all the reasons given,
the appeal should
succeed. Counsel for the appellant agreed or conceded at the hearing
that the matter should be remitted to the
Magistrates Court for
proper reconsideration of the application on its facts in accordance
with the peremptory provisions of Rule
43A read with s 66 of the Act
as outlined in this judgment.
27.
The general
rule is that costs follow the result. Although the respondent chose
not to oppose the appeal, the appeal process is
an extension of the
recovery process, being part of the enforcement of the judgment
debt.
[15]
The appellant was
impelled by a failure on the part of the court below to correctly
apply the peremptory provisions of Rule 43A
and established legal
principles in relation to execution against immovable residential
property in order to vindicate its right
to a remedy provided in law.
The appellant should therefore be entitled to its costs.
28.
In the circumstances, the following order is granted:
ORDER:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
The order of the court below dismissing the application for leave to
execute
against the immovable property of the respondent is set aside
and replaced with the following order:
“
The application
brought by the appellant for leave to execute against the immovable
property described as section 65 (being door
65) Le Grand Bernard, 40
Ballyclare Drive Bryanston, Sandton-North is referred back to the
Magistrates Court for reconsideration
in accordance with the
principles outlined in this judgment.”
_________________
A.
MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I
agree
_________________
L.B
VUMA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
2 November 2021
Judgment
delivered
25 January 2022
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be have been at 10h00 on 10 November 2021.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for Appellant:
Mr S Mc Turk
Attorneys
for Appellant:
Otto Krause Inc Attorneys
No
appearance for the Respondent.
[1]
Rule
43 A of the rules regulating proceedings in the Magistrates Courts.
[2]
Further
considerations arise in the case of a primary residence, as outlined
in Rule 43A (2)(a)(ii). In the case of immovable
property not
comprising residential immovable property or a primary residence of
the debtor, excussion against movables is a
prerequisite in terms of
Rule 43(1)(a)(i). In terms of s66(1)(a) execution against the
movable property of the debtor is first
required and only if no
sufficient movable property is found with which to satisfy the
judgment debt, is execution against the
immovable property of the
judgment debtor in satisfaction of a judgment debt enforceable.
[3]
Jones
and Buckle ‘The Civil Practice of the Magistrates’
Courts in South Africa (Volume I and II) in their commentary
on s 66
at p 454
[4]
The
Constitutional Court confirmed these examples of relevant
circumstances in
Gudwana
v Steko Development
2011
(3) SA 608
(CC) at 626E.
[5]
The
Body Corporate of Bushmill Sectional Title Scheme v Kgomo,
Case
No. 3039/2020, delivered on 28 May 2021 per Vally J, an unreported
judgment of a full bench in this division.
[6]
See:
Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Body Corporate of Geovy Villa
2004
(3) SA 362
(SCA).
[7]
Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Body Corporate of Geovy Villa
2004
(3) SA 362
(SCA), para 26 & 28.
[8]
Section
15B(3)
(b)
provides that the Registrar of Deeds shall not register a transfer
of a unit or of an undivided share therein unless there is
produced
a clearance certificate from the local authority that all rates
and
moneys due to such local authority have been paid.
[9]
Terence
Christopher Demetriou and Another v Sheriff of the Magistrate’s
Court: Alberton and Others
(GSJ)
(unreported judgment no 2012/43269) (26 April 2013).
[10]
Cited
in fn 6 above.
[11]
See:
"Protecting
preferent creditors: Setting a reserve or obtaining consent?"
De Rebus, December 2013:20 [2013] DEREBUS
242 by RJ Bouwer, where
the author pointed out that ‘.
[12]
See:
Willow
Waters Homeowners Association (Pty) Ltd v Koka N.O. and Others
2015
(5) SA 304
(SCA) at paras 24-26;
Absa
Bank Limited v Mokebe; Absa Bank Limited v Kobe; Absa Bank Limited v
Vokwani; Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Colombick
and
Another
(2018/00612; 2017/48091; 2018/1459; 2017/35579) [2018]
ZAGPJHC 487 (12 September 2018), para 62 (‘
Mokebe
’).
[13]
In terms of Rule 43A(9)(a) the
court
must
consider whether a reserve price is to be set. Relevant factors for
determining whether a reserve price is to be set are outlined
in
Rule 43A(9)(b) read with further guiding principles enunciated in
Mokebe
(cited
in fn 12 above)
.
In
Mokebe
,
the Full Court in this division acknowledged that “
the
setting of a reserve price would depend on the facts of each case.
Some facts may indicate that the debt is so hopelessly
in excess of
the value of the property that the reserve price would be irrelevant
compared to the value of the property,
but
yet, if the debt is not satisfied by the proceeds of the sale of the
property, a debtor still remains liable for any balance
after
realisation of the property
….a
reserve price should be set in all matters where facts indicate it
…”
(own emphasis).
Mokebe
dealt with applications for leave to execute against the
primary
residence
of a debtor under the provisions of the Uniform Rules of Court,
applicable in the High Court.
[14]
One
such factor being whether there
is
no other satisfactory means of satisfying the judgment debt.
[15]
Stewarts
and Lloyds Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Solid Steel Construction (Pty) Ltd,
Case
No. A3070/2021, par 25, an unreported decision of the Full Bench in
this Division, delivered on 10 November 2021.
sino noindex
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