Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 100South Africa
Bila and Others v Monterey Body Corporate and Others (2021/5060) [2022] ZAGPJHC 100 (18 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 November 2021
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Bila and Others v Monterey Body Corporate and Others (2021/5060) [2022] ZAGPJHC 100 (18 February 2022)
Bila and Others v Monterey Body Corporate and Others (2021/5060) [2022] ZAGPJHC 100 (18 February 2022)
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sino date 18 February 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2021/5060
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
OF
INTEREST OF OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
REVISED
In
the matter between:
ANANIAS
BILA &
OTHERS
Applicants
and
MONTEREY
BODY CORPORATE
First Respondent
PAL
MANAGEMENT COMPANY
Second Respondent
VAN
DEN BOS,
JAN
Third Respondent
NEIVA,
ANTONIO CARLOS
Fourth Respondent
COMMUNITY
SCHEME OMBUDSMAN SERVICE
Fifth Respondent
JUDGMENT:
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
# Friedman AJ:
Friedman AJ:
1
This is an application for leave to appeal
against the judgment and order which I handed down on 24 November
2021 in the above-mentioned
application.
2
I have, in my judgment on the merits (“
the
merits judgment
”), explained the
history of this matter and the relief sought. It is accordingly not
necessary to go into those issues here.
In the merits judgment, I
found it convenient to distinguish between two broad categories of
relief sought by the applicants in
their notice of motion. First,
there was the prayer which sought to hold the third respondent in
contempt of an order made by this
Court under case number 28015/2017
(prayer 1 of the notice of motion). Secondly there was, essentially,
all of the other prayers
for relief (prayers 2 to 8 of the notice of
motion).
3
It is trite that an appeal lies against the
order made at first instance, and not against the reasoning in the
judgment explaining
the order. The order which I made on the merits
was to dismiss the application with costs. So,
section 17
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
requires me to ask two questions.
First, whether the applicants have reasonable prospects of success on
appeal – ie, reasonable
prospects of persuading an appeal court
to grant some or all of the relief sought. Secondly, even if they do
not, whether there
is some other compelling reason to grant leave to
appeal.
4
No compelling reason, unrelated to the
prospects of success, has been suggested and none occurs to me. So,
the real issue is prospects
of success. In my view, there is no
reasonable prospect of my order dismissing the application being
overturned on appeal. I explain
this briefly below.
5
As I did in the merits judgment, let me
distinguish between the two categories of relief sought. The prayer
seeking a declaration
of contempt has simply not adequately been
supported in the founding affidavit. I do not believe that there is a
reasonable prospect
that an appeal court would find otherwise.
6
As to the rest of the relief sought, I made
the point in the merits judgment that much of it was not properly
formulated and was
hard to follow. The approach that I, in essence,
followed was to construe the founding affidavit very generously in
order to try
to identify the true issues – an exercise which
was necessary because the true issues were not concisely and clearly
identified
by the applicants themselves. Having conducted that
exercise, I concluded that, to the extent that the applicants had
valid complaints
relating to the way in which the body corporate was
being managed, their remedy did not lie in approaching this Court for
relief,
but rather in exercising their rights in terms of sections 38
and 39 of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 (“the
CSOS Act”).
7
The question whether sections 38 and 39 of
the CSOS Act oust the jurisdiction of this Court to consider
applications for relief
covering the same subject matter, is an
interesting one. For the reasons given in the merits judgment, I
respectfully agree with
the conclusion of Sher J in
Heathrow
Property Holdings No 3 v Manhattan Place Body Corporate
2021 JDR 1017 (WCC) that the jurisdiction of this Court is indeed
ousted in those circumstances. But I would never be so cavalier
as to
discount the possibility that we are wrong. The difficulty for the
applicants in this case is that, even if I were wrong
on the meaning
of sections 38 and 39 of the CSOS Act, the applicants would
independently need to be able to make out a case for
some or all of
the relief except for the contempt relief (which plainly does not
fall under the CSOS Act and which I dismissed
for different reasons).
8
For the reasons given in the merits
judgment (and briefly above), I do not believe that the applicants
have reasonable prospects
of persuading an appeal court that any of
the relief in prayers 2 to 8 of the original notice of motion could
be granted, even
if the jurisdiction of this Court is not ousted by
the CSOS Act. In the circumstances, the application for leave to
appeal must
be dismissed. There is no reason why costs should not
follow the result.
# ORDER
ORDER
9
I accordingly make the following order:
1. The application for
leave to appeal the judgment and order under case no 2021/5060 handed
down on 24 November 2021 is dismissed.
2. The parties listed
at Caselines at 027-10 (whose names are listed in Annexure A to this
judgment) are to pay the costs of the
application for leave to
appeal.
________________________________________
ADRIAN
FRIEDMAN
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected above and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it
to the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for hand
down is deemed to be 18 February 2022.
APPEARANCES:
Attorney
for the applicants:
Makhosi Poyo Inc
Counsel
for the applicants:
M Poyo (attorney with right of appearance)
Attorney
for the first to fourth respondents: AM Ellis Attorney
Counsel for the first to
fourth respondents: M Köhn
Date
of hearing: 18 February 2022
Date
of judgment: 18 February 2022
ANNEXURE
A
1.
ANANIAS MOSES BILA of Unit [....], Monterey Body Corporate,
27 Lily
Avenue, Berea, Johannesburg
2.
JOYCE HLANGANANI MATSHEKE of No. [….], Door [….],
Monterey Body Corporate, 27 Lily Avenue, Berea, Johannesburg
3.
DAMBISA TISO of Unit No. [….], Monterey Body Corporate,
27
Lily Avenue, Berea, Johannesburg
4.
IDAH DIKELA of Unit [….], Monterey Body Corporate, 27
Lily
Avenue, Berea, Johannesburg
5.
HASEL NTOMBOMZI JONES of Unit [….], Monterey Body Corporate,
27 Lily Avenue, Berea, Johannesburg
6.
VALARIE MOLOKWANE of Unit [….], Monterey Body Corporate,
27
Lily Avenue, Berea, Johannesburg
7.
CHARLIE MOFOKENG of Unit [….], Monterey Body Corporate,
27
Lily Avenue, Berea, Johannesburg
8.
FARO THOMAS MOHLALA of Unit [….], Monterey Body Corporate,
27
Lily Avenue, Berea, Johannesburg
9.
ELIZABETH BUSISIWE MAHLALELA of Unit [….], Monterey Body
Corporate, 27 Lily Avenue, Berea, Johannesburg
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