Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 187South Africa
Van Den Bos N.O. and Others v Letsoalo and Others (30565/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 187 (30 March 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Van Den Bos N.O. and Others v Letsoalo and Others (30565/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 187 (30 March 2022)
Van Den Bos N.O. and Others v Letsoalo and Others (30565/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 187 (30 March 2022)
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sino date 30 March 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 30565/2020
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
30 March 2022
In the matter between:
JAN VAN DEN BOS N.O.
(In his capacity as Administrator of
Panarama Place Body Corporate)
1st Appellant
TRADE WORX 148 (PTY) LTD t/a
PAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT &
ADMINISTRATORS
2nd
Appellant
MINISTER
OF HUMAN SETTLEMENT
3rd
Appellant
MEC FOR HUMAN SETTLEMENT
GAUTENG
PROVINCE
4th
Appellant
COMMUNITY
SCHEME OMBUD SERVICES
5th
Appellant
ESTATE
AGENCY AFFAIRS BOARD
6th
Appellant
AND
LETSOALO
MMAKHUDU SIMON
1st
Respondent
LUVUNO
LINAH HOSHI
2nd
Respondent
MPHEKGWANA
ALFRED MATOME
3rd
Respondent
MAMONYANE
EDITH
4th
Respondent
LUKHELE
WANG DANIEL
5th
Respondent
TEME
KEIKANETSWE CHRISTINA
6th
Respondent
MALINGA
DUMSANE GEORGE
7th
Respondent
(This judgment is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and uploading it
to the electronic file of
this matter on CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 30
March 2022.)
JUDGMENT
MIA, J
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment handed down on 21 December
2020. The first
appellant appeals against the whole of the judgment
and order. The respondents opposed the appeal. None of the other
appellants
referred to filed notices or appeared.
[2]
The appellant’s application contained a lengthy list of grounds
on which he
sought to appeal. The grounds of appeal include that a
complaint lodged by
Mr Lerole against Mr. Jan van Den Bos & Associates, PAL
Properties and Tygerberg Body Corporate with the
Community Schemes
Ombud Services during 2017 under case number CSOS001285/GP/17 was not
relevant in the urgent application to the
respondents. Furthermore,
that the fifth appellant’s adjudication order was not binding.
A further ground was that there
were orders made under case number
10218/2019 and suspended under case number 35448/2020. This appears
to have been a development
after the order was handed down. The
appellant referred to in the heading a list of case numbers that did
not form part of this
matter and papers which were not attached. The
appellant listed further that the court failed to consider that the
grounds on which
the matter was to be heard on an urgent basis was
premised on an order between parties unrelated to the above case
number 30565/2020.If
any only interim relief ought to have been
granted related to this it was contended that the finding was based
on the premise that
the Body Corporate of Tygerberg and Panarama
Place have an “intercorrelation” between the same set of
facts.
[3]
The appellant also raised issues relating to
-
the appellant as an administrator of Prospect Place Body Corporate;
-
the urgent order in relation to the relief the respondents could
obtain within
the criminal justice system;
-
whether reliance on annexures W27 and W40 is factually correct;
-
whether reliance on an annexure where no reference was made to Mr van
den Bos,
in his personal and/or nominated official capacity as
administrator was correct;
-
related to a finding that owners of sectional title units and/or the
Body Corporate
of Panarama Place may indirectly be barred from
initiating proceedings on grounds that debt incurred by occupants and
the occupants
be absolved from levy payments; and
-
that the court approved the stay in sale of executions against the
interests of
the Body Corporate of Panarama Place.
-
in doing the above the court failed to apply the provisions of the
Sectional Title
Act 95 of 1986, and subsequently the Sectional Title
Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011 and the regulations thereto
subsequently
enacted which sets out the requirements in relation to
retention of financial documentation and the administrator’s
obligation
thereto.
-
the court was unable to know that the appellants have substantially
complied with
the 20 March 2019 order under case number 20181/2019
albeit its suspension on 3 November 2020.
-
the appellant referred to Annexure C where Dippenaar J on 3 and 19
December 2020
granted an order that the appellant joins all the
parties under the above-mentioned case numbers for determination in a
consolidated
hearing under Rule 10 (which order will be made
available in due course as annexure C which appellants have not been
able to obtain
at the time of lodging this application).
[3]
The appellant contended further that the fifth respondent’s
order was being
challenged
under
case number 35448/2020 and has been suspended pending the
determination of case number 35448/2020 under Part B. Consequently,
the fifth respondent is unable to adjudicate further. Moreover, the
appellant indicated that it had served financials and related
documents under case number 35448/2020. In the circumstances, the
urgent application ought to have been dismissed and the respondents
ought to have paid the costs on an attorney-and-client scale.
[4]
Counsel appearing for the appellants submitted that he had not drawn
the application
for leave to appeal nor had the appellant set the
matter down. The appellant sought to have the matter joined with the
matters
referred to above. He conceded that there was no reference to
the above matters in the application, nor was there reference to the
suggestion made that the assaults or intimidation was a matter
between occupants of the Body Corporate of Panarama Close as raised
in the submission. There was no Annexure C attached to the
application for leave to appeal and no attachment of any of the
orders
referred to in the application for leave to appeal. He
submitted that there was compliance with the court’s orders
1-4, and
the issue of intimidation could not be argued further on the
papers as it had not been raised and the only issue he could raise
was with regard to the costs order against the appellant. This was so
as the appellant in the normal course complied and furnished
financial information which the respondents could obtain from the
Body Corporate.
[5]
Counsel for the respondent submitted that the appellant’s
application for leave
to appeal was only lodged to avoid complying
with the court order. This it was argued was the reason the appellant
failed to prosecute
the
leave to appeal.
[6]
Counsel for the respondent submitted that the test in terms of s
17(1) of the Superior
Court Act, 10 of 2013 required that leave to
appeal only be granted where the Judge or Judges concerned are of the
opinion that:
“
(
a
)
(i) the appeal would
have a reasonable prospect of success;
or
(ii)
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting
judgments on the matter under consideration;
(
b
)
the decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit
of section 16 (2) (
a
); and
(
c
)
where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the
issues in the case, the appeal would
lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the parties.”
[7]
He submitted furthermore that the test was clear and remained
whether
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success meaning that
another Court would reasonably come to a different decision.
He
argued that the appellant’s application in this matter did not
meet the requirement to be granted a leave. He continued
that it
should fail for the following reasons:
7.1 The court had
the power to appoint and to remove the administrator and an order
that the administrator be
investigated should be abided rather than
avoided by appealing the decision.
7.2 The court had
appointed the administrator and could order an investigation. There
was no prospect of an appeal
aimed at avoiding an investigation.
[8]
He relied on the decision
in
John
Walker Pools v Consolidated Aone Trade & Invest 6 (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation) and Another
2018 (4) SA 433
SCA, at paragraph [2] where the Court set out the
test as follows:
“
the
test we must apply is not whether JWP’s proposed appeal should
succeed but whether there are reasonable prospects of success
in the
proposed appeal.”
In
addition, counsel pointed out that the respondents also took issue
with the absence of heads of argument in the matter and that
the
respondents were compelled to set down the matter as the appellant
had not done so.
[9]
Counsel referred to the further case of
DooreWaard and Another v S
2019 ZANWHC/Case number CC33/2017(unreported) where the Court at
paragraph [2] stated
“
The law
governing a notice of appeal (and also notice of application for
leave to appeal) is trite. The grounds of appeal in a notice
of
application for leave to appeal must be clearly and succinctly set
out in unambiguous terms so as to enable the Court and the
respondent
to be fully and properly informed of the case which the applicant
seeks to make out and which the respondent is to meet
in opposing the
application for leave to appeal. The notice should not contain
arguments. Therefore heads of argument must also
be filed and served
in which the points to be argued will be set out in much more
detail.”
[10] In
the present matter, the appellant filed the application for leave to
appeal and then did nothing
further. The appellant did not ensure the
appeal was set down and failed to file heads of argument more than
four months after
the appeal was filed. In the application for leave
to appeal, reference is made to other case numbers where the
appellant sought
to have his term of appointment extended. None of
those court orders were attached and it is not clear that there was
substantial
compliance with the court order. Counsel for the
appellant submitted that there was compliance with orders 1-4. This
submission
is contrary to the grounds raised in the application for
leave to appeal that seeks to appeal the whole of the order.
[11] In
addition to the lengthy application for leave to appeal the appellant
cited the Minister of
Human Settlements, the MEC for Human
Settlement, the Community Scheme Ombud Services and the Estate Agency
Affairs Board. None
of those appellants appeared to have filed
notices or appeared to have had supported the appellant’s
application for leave
to appeal. It is not clear how the fifth
appellant appeals the order if the appellant suggests that the fifth
appellant is conflicted.
There was nothing received from the
Community Service Ombud suggesting the office was not in a position
to give effect to the order.
It is only the appellant who has
difficulty with the order.
[12]
I have noted counsel for the
appellant’s
request that the application be postponed to be heard with matters
that are referred to in the application for
leave to appeal. There is
no reason to do so. Copies of the applications referred to were not
furnished. It is not clear why the
determination having been made and
the application for leave to appeal being filed, the appellant has
not prosecuted the application
and sought relief it ought to have.
Counsel for the appellant conceded that the application was
incomplete as the annexure referred
to was not attached. Moreover,
counsel relied on the argument that the attacks on the respondent
were perpetrated by tenants of
the Body Corporate which was not
supported by the record or the application and was raised for the
first time from the bar.
[13] I
have considered the submissions of both counsel and the grounds on
which the appellant relied
in the application for leave to appeal.
Counsel for the appellant submitted that the appellant had complied
in any event with orders
1-4 and the appellant only took issue with
the order for costs. Having regard to the submissions and the
application for leave
to appeal, the relief was granted based on the
papers before the court pertaining to the evidence relating to the
racist and derogatory
language leveled at occupiers and owners of
properties, the alleged assault and intimidation but more importantly
the evidence
which was placed before the court that the appellant
appointed a company as the managing agent, where he was listed as a
director
and the failure to furnish certain owners with financial
information.
[14] In
considering the record and the grounds of appeal I am not persuaded
that another court would
reasonably come to a different conclusion.
Having considered the above, I am of the view that costs should
follow the outcome.
[15] In
the result I make the following order:
1.
The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
S
C MIA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
On
behalf of the applicants
: Mr M Kohn
Instructed
by
: AM Ellis Attorneys
On
behalf of the respondents : Mr N
Kubayi
Instructed
by
: Noveni Eddy Kubayi Inc
Date
of hearing
: 24 March 2022
Date
of judgment
: 30 March 2022
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