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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 358
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## The Body Corporate of Brushwood Sectional Title Scheme v Whitfields Property Management (Pty) Ltd (17078/2021)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 358 (26 May 2022)
The Body Corporate of Brushwood Sectional Title Scheme v Whitfields Property Management (Pty) Ltd (17078/2021)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 358 (26 May 2022)
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sino date 26 May 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 17078/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
26
MAY 2022
In
the matter between:
THE
BODY CORPORATE OF BRUSHWOOD
APPLICANT
SECTIONAL
TITLE SCHEME
And
WHITFIELDS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
(PTY)
LTD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by
the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines.
The date
of the judgment is deemed to be the 26
th
of May 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
In this application, the applicant sought an order against the
respondent terminating
the Management Agreement concluded between the
parties during or about 2020 in which the applicant appointed the
respondent as
its management agent. Furthermore, the applicant sought
an order that the respondent be directed to furnish all the financial
documentation
and other information in its possession relating to the
applicant from the inception of the contract to the date of this
order.
[2]
It is common cause that the parties concluded a management agreement
in 2020. On the 11
th
of November 2020 the trustees of the applicant passed and duly
adopted resolution appointing Venter and Associates Inc as attorneys
for the applicant. On the 12
th
of November 2020 the applicant issued an instruction to the
respondent to pay into Venter & Associates’ trust account
a
sum of R50 000 as a deposit for legal fees. The respondent
responded by saying that it will pay the said sum of R50 000
to
the attorneys only once it has received an invoice. Further
correspondence was exchanged between Venter & Associates and
the
respondent wherein it was explained that a pro-forma
invoice could not be produced before the work is done and
the
resolution of the applicant was attached. However, the respondent
refused to make the payment without a pro forma invoice being
issued.
[3]
On the 23
rd
of November 2020 the applicant addressed an
e-mail to the respondent stating that the minutes of the Annual
General Meeting of
the applicant held on the 29
th
of May
2019 state that the number of the envisaged trustees was not met and
the deponent of the applicant and other two trustees
were then
appointed. Two trustees resigned immediately after the meeting which
necessitated the appointment of the deponent and
the other two
trustees. A meeting of the trustees was held on the 10
th
of November 2020 when the resolution was taken and two of the
trustees signed the resolution to appoint Venter & Associates
and
to pay them the sum of R50 000 as a deposit for legal fees. The
applicant regarded the refusal by the respondent to pay
the R50 000
as a breach of the contract and therefore thereby cancelled the
contract.
[4]
The first respondent refused to accept the cancellation of the
contract – hence
the applicant engaged the service of Venter &
Associate Inc to address a letter to the respondent. The letter
confirmed the
cancellation of the management agreement by the
applicant on the 23
rd
of November 2020 and afforded the
respondent an opportunity to save the situation by making the payment
of the R50 000 failing
which the management agreement will be
cancelled. The respondent refused to make payment and demanded that a
resolution of the
trustees and pro-forma invoice be produced before
it would make the payment. Venter & Associates addressed another
letter wherein
it terminated the management agreement and demanded
that the respondent furnish all the financial documents and
information it
has in its possession.
[5]
In response to the applicant’s demand, the respondent raised
the issue that
the trustees of the applicant have not been duly
appointed; that they did not quorate when passing the resolution and
that the
resolution cancelling the management agreement was irregular
and therefore not binding. That payment of the R50 000 would
only be effected on production of an invoice. This necessitated the
launching of these proceedings.
[6]
It is apparent that the relationship between applicant and the
respondent is that
of agency and mandate. It is trite that under
common law a mandate is in general terminable at the will of the
principal and that
it is against public policy to coerce a principal
into retaining an individual as an agent when he no longer wishes to
have him
as such.
[7]
In
Liberty Group Ltd v Mall Space Management CC t/a Mall Space
Management (644/18)
[2019] ZASCA 142
(1 October 2019)
Zondi JA
writing for the Court stated the following:
“
paragraph 36 It
must be emphasised that in the present case we are not dealing with
the terms of a contract which is alleged to
be contrary to good
faith, fairness and equity. We are dealing with a rule of the common
law, namely, that a principal is entitled
to revoke a mandate of
agency. It would be against public policy to coerce a principal into
retaining an individual as his agent,
when he no longer wishes to
retain him as such. If the termination of the mandate has prejudiced
the agent his remedy lies in a
claim for damages and not in an order
compelling the principal to retain him as his agent in the future.”
[8]
It should be recalled that the respondent was appointed as a
management agent of the
applicant in terms an agreement concluded
between the parties in 2020. The applicant was represented by the
current trustees when
the agreement was concluded. It can therefore
not be open for the respondent to now say these trustees with whom it
concluded a
management agreement which appointed it as the agent were
not properly appointed and therefore do not have the authority to
cancel
the agreement. According to the provisions of the prescribed
management rules an elected or replacement trustee holds office until
the end of the next annual general meeting.
[9]
It is my considered view that, the fact that the applicant has not
had a proper meeting
convened for the purposes of appointing new and
or additional trustees since the 2019 annual general meeting, does
not deprive
the current trustees the authority or precludes them from
representing and acting on behalf of the applicant for they were duly
appointed in the 2019 annual general meeting when the other two
trustees resigned. It is therefore not for the respondent to persist
to act as an agent in terms of the mandate when its principal,
represented by the trustees who appointed the respondent, no longer
wishes to retain it as its agent.
[10]
Rule 7 of the Prescribed Management Rules (PMR) prescribed in terms
of section 10(2) of the Sectional
Titles Schemes Management Act, 8 of
2011 provides as follows:
“
Nomination,
election and replacement
7. (1)………….
(5) if a
trustee ceases to hold office –
(a) the
remaining trustees; or
(b) the
members in general meeting,
May appoint a
replacement trustee.
(6) An
elected or replacement trustee holds office until the end of the next
annual general meeting and is eligible
for re-election, if properly
nominated.”
[11]
The applicant was entitled to terminate the agreement because the
respondent breached the terms
of the agreement by refusing to execute
its mandate to pay a creditor as instructed and directed by a member
of the executive,
a trustee, of the applicant. Clause 2.8 of the
management agreement provided that payments of accounts shall be made
to service
providers and other creditors on specific approval by a
scheme executive. The applicant was not required to furnish the
respondent
with any notice for the termination and the resolutions
passed by the trustees are valid and of force and effect as they were
resolutions
of the trustees of the applicant. I hold the view
therefore that the trustees of the applicant have the necessary
authority to
launch these proceedings against the respondent.
[12]
Rule 10(2) of the PMR provides the following with regard to the
validity of the actions on behalf
of the body corporate:
“
Validity of
actions
10 (1)
……………..
(2)
A resolution adopted or other act performed by the trustees remains
valid
and effective notwithstanding the later discovery of some
defect in the appointment of a trustee or the disqualification of a
trustee”.
[13]
In any event, even if I am wrong in accepting that the current
trustees were duly appointed in
the annual general meeting in 2019
when the other two trustees resigned, their actions remain valid and
effective in terms of the
prescripts of rule 10 (2) of the PMR. If
there is any defect in the appointment of the trustees it does not
mean that their actions
become unlawful but remain valid and
effective unless it may be demonstrated that those actions were
unfair, unreasonable and not
in the best interest of the applicant.
It does not afford the respondent the latitude to force itself onto
the applicant as its
agent when it has breached the terms of the
agreement and the applicant has terminated the agreement for that
reason.
[14]
It is my respectful view therefore that the applicant has lawfully
terminated the management
agreement due to the breach committed by
the respondent. Furthermore, the applicant was not obliged to give
any notice of the termination
of the agreement. The inescapable
conclusion is therefore that the applicant is entitled to the relief
that it seeks in terms of
the notice of motion.
[15]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
The management agreement concluded between the applicant and
respondent during or about 2020 is declared
cancelled;
2.
The respondent shall furnish the applicant, within (5) five days from
the service of this order with the following:
2.1.
full financial reporting of the applicant for the entire period
of
the respondent’s tenure as the management agent;
2.2
bank stamped financial statements for the entire period of
the
respondent’s tenure as the management agent;
2.3
all budget approvals for the entire period of the respondent’s
tenure as the management agent;
2.4
audited financials for the entire period of the respondent’s
tenure as the management agent;
2.5
management accounts for the entire period of the respondent’s
tenure as the management agent;
2.6
full disclosure of all registered owners, including contact
details
for the entire period of the respondent’s tenure as the
management agent;
2.7
full disclosure of all rental occupants, including contact
details
for the entire period of the respondent’s tenure as the
management agent;
2.8
all minutes of annual general and special meetings held by
the
trustees for the entire period of the respondent’s tenure as
the management agent and minute books thereto;
2.9
all general and special resolutions passed by the trustees
for the
entire period of the respondent’s tenure as the management
agent;
2.10
most up to date Sectional Scheme Plans (should any alterations have
been
made to the unit up to the end of December 2020);
2.11
records, resolutions and registered parking bay/car port/ garage
layout
plans within the scheme and the respective notorial deeds
allocated to units within the applicant;
2.12
all service provider agreements signed during the entire period of
the
respondent’s tenure as the management agent;
2.13
all payroll information for the employee(s) (including SARS profile,
all UIF and PAYE/EMP submissions) for the entire period of the
respondent’s tenure as the management agent;
2.14
the maintenance, repair and placement plan/s prepare for the entire
period
of the respondent’s tenure as the management agent;
2.15
all insurance replacement valuations for the scheme from 19 December
2006 to 9 December 2020;
2.16
all insurance documents for the scheme from 19 December 2006 to 9
December
2020;
2.17
a copy of the registered management and conduct rules and compliance
certificate received from CSOS from 19 December 2006 to 9 December
2020;
2.18
the governance documents and records of the applicant as contemplated
and stipulated in prescribed management rule 27;
2.19
the applicant’s 10-year maintenance plan from 19 December 2006
to end of 9 December 2020;
2.20
the applicant’s customer age analysis as at 19 December 2006 to
end of 9 December 2020;
2.21
the applicant’s detailed customer ledger accounts from 19
December
2006 to end of 9 December 2020;
2.22
the applicant’s CSOS Registration submissions documents from 19
December 2006 to end of 9 December 2020;
2.23
the applicant’s SARS Income Tax details for the scheme from 19
December 2006 to the end of December 2020 (which includes the tax
number, appointed SARS representative and SARS online provide
logon
details);
2.24
budgets from 19 December 2006 to end of 9 December 2020;
2.25
security company information and documentation pertaining to the
applicant;
2.26
garden service information and documentation pertaining to the
applicant;
2.27
meter reading information pertaining to the scheme;
2.28
SG Plans;
2.29
City of Johannesburg/Eskom accounts pertaining to the scheme;
2.30
intercom system login and cell phone number;
2.31
copy of the current levy roll of the scheme;
2.32
all balance sheets 19 December 2006 to end of 9 December 2020;
2.33
detailed supplier ledgers for 19 December 2006 to end of 9 December
2020;
and
2.34
invoices rendered and received and statutory documents.
3.
The sheriff is authorised and directed to attach and remove the
documents listed in paragraph
2 supra and furnish same to the
applicant in the event that the respondent fails to hand over
possession of the said documents
as ordered;
4.
The respondent is to pay the costs of this application on the scale
as between attorney and
client.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing: 16
th
of May 2022
Date
of Judgment: 26
th
May 2022
For
the Applicant: Advocate
WG Pretorius
Instructed
by: Venter
& Associate Inc
Tel:
087 945 0300
louis@venterine.co.za
For
the Respondent: Advocate
V Vergano
Instructed
by: Karnavos
Attorneys
Tel:
082 813 4715
stephen@skattorneys.biz
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