Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 649South Africa
Raschid and Another v Lenasia Tamil Association Body Corporate and Others (A3048/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 649 (6 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 September 2022
Headnotes
appeals brought under section 57 of the CSOS were appeals in the strict sense, with the proviso that the right of appeal was limited to questions of law only. The full court held that that the procedure to be followed was that the appeal should be brought by notice of appeal (i.e. without affidavits) where the grounds of appeal are set out succinctly and in which both the adjudicator and the third respondent must be cited, as opposed to being brought by way of a notice of motion supported by affidavits.[1]
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Raschid and Another v Lenasia Tamil Association Body Corporate and Others (A3048/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 649 (6 September 2022)
Raschid and Another v Lenasia Tamil Association Body Corporate and Others (A3048/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 649 (6 September 2022)
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sino date 6 September 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEAL
CASE NO: A3048/2021
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
6/9/2022
In
the matter between:
RASCHID,
MOHAMED AZAD
First Appellant
VALAITHAM,
ANAND NAIDOO
Second Appellant
And
LENASIA
TAMIL ASSOCIATION BODY CORPORATE
First Respondent
ANDREAS
N.O, ANDREA
Second Respondent
COMMUNITY
SCHEMES OMBUD SERVICES
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is deemed to be handed down upon uploading by the Registrar
to the electronic court file.
Manoim
J
:
INTRODUCTION
1.
This an appeal brought by the first and second appellants against a
decision
made by the second respondent acting as an adjudicator in
terms of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 (“the
Act”).
2.
The first and second appellants are residents and registered owners
of
units in a sectional title development scheme known as L[....]
P[....] situated in Lenasia Extension [....] in Johannesburg.
3.
The development is what is defined in the Act as a ‘community
scheme’.
The first respondent is the body corporate of the
scheme, and is the ‘association’ as referred to in the
Act. The first
respondent has not opposed the appeal.
4.
The second respondent is the adjudicator who was appointed by the
third
respondent to adjudicate the dispute between the appellants and
the first respondent. This process was done in terms of the Act.
The
second and third respondents have served a notice to abide.
Nonetheless the third respondent was represented in this court
but
for a specific purpose. It sought a declaratory order in respect of
the process that is to be followed with appeals in terms
of the Act.
This is an issue which I discuss more fully later.
5.
The appellants are dissatisfied with the outcome of the adjudication
process
and hence have appealed against that decision to this court.
6.
The right of appeal to the High Court in terms of the Act is limited.
Section
57(1) of the Act provides that:
“
An applicant,
the association or any affected person who is dissatisfied with an
adjudicator’s order, may appeal to the High
Court, but only on
a question of law.”
7.
The issue that this court has to decide is whether the appeal has
raised
a question of law that this court can properly decide. Before
I do so it is necessary to consider the process by which the appeal
has been brought.
8.
In this case the appeal has been brought by notice of appeal,
as
required by the full court decision of this division in
Stenersen
& Tulleken Administration CC v Linton Park Body Corporate and
Another
2020 (1) SA 651
(GJ). This notwithstanding, the third
respondent has used the occasion of this appeal to make certain
representations about whether
that is the appropriate process to have
been followed. I consider this argument first because it sets the
context for the manner
in which I thereafter analyse the facts in
this appeal.
THE
REPRESENTATIONS MADE BY THE THIRD RESPONDENT
9.
The appellants, as
already stated, brought this appeal by way of a notice of appeal.
This complies with the procedure for section
57 appeals as set down
by the full court in
Stenersen
.
The full court held that appeals brought under section 57 of the CSOS
were appeals in the strict sense, with the proviso that
the right of
appeal was limited to questions of law only. The full court held that
that the procedure to be followed was that the
appeal should be
brought by notice of appeal (i.e. without affidavits) where the
grounds of appeal are set out succinctly and in
which both the
adjudicator and the third respondent must be cited, as opposed to
being brought by way of a notice of motion supported
by
affidavits.
[1]
10.
Stenerson
was decided by a full
court of this division after two courts in other divisions of the
High Court had held that the procedure for
section 57 appeals was
that they are to be brought as reviews by notice of motion supported
by affidavits.
[2]
The attraction
of this latter process, according to the third respondent, citing, in
addition to
Shmaryahu
and
Durdoc
above
,
Kingshaven Homeowners Association v Botha 8 Others
[3]
that:
"[t]he
motion procedure has the added advantage that it informs the
respondent parties what they must do if they wish to oppose
the
appeal and by when they should do so"
.
11.
The third respondent asks this court to reconsider the practice that
Stenerson
requires this division to follow. It argues that we
may do so in terms of the court’s inherent powers set out in
section
173 of the Constitution or that we may under
section
17(1)(a)(ii)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
refer of the issue
to the Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”) for determination.
12.
But the full court in
Stenerson
was specifically
constituted by the Judge President of this division for the purpose
of determining the manner and procedure to
be followed when noting an
appeal in terms of the Act.
[4]
The full court made the decision with full awareness of the decisions
in
Shmaryahu
and
Durdoc
.
[5]
Although perhaps not absolutely settled,
[6]
a court comprising two judges is bound by the decision of the full
court consisting of three judges, as in
Stenerson
.
In any event, even if we are not bound by
Stenerson
,
it does not appear to us that
Stenerson
was clearly wrong so as
to permit us to depart therefrom. And more so where
Stenerson
was specifically
constituted to decide the issue.
13.
But regardless of whether we are bound by
Stenerson
as a
matter of judicial precedent
,
in this matter there is no
lis
between the appellants and the third respondent. The third respondent
acknowledges this and has filed a notice to abide together
with the
adjudicator. Nor is there any dispute on the issue of the appropriate
procedure to follow as between the appellants and
the first
respondent body corporate or the second respondent adjudicator,
neither of which has opposed the appeal. Moreover, the
appellants
have complied with the
Stenerson
procedure and do not seek any
relief in relation to the procedure on appeal, such as by a referral
on the issue to the SCA. The
applicant is content with the procedure
laid down for this division in
Stenerson
. It is accordingly
not open to the third respondent to make use of this appeal as an
opportunity to decide an issue which neither
the applicants nor the
first and second respondent seek be decided.
14.
I may also add that as this court is not being asked to grant leave
to appeal,
section 17
of the
Superior Courts Act would
not apply.
15.
Whilst sympathetic to the difficulties faced by the third respondent
as a national public
entity having to comply with divergent practices
between the various divisions of the High Court, it will have to find
another
occasion to bring this issue before the SCA.
16.
This appeal will accordingly be decided on the basis of the notice of
appeal in accordance
with the presently prevailing procedure laid
down in
Stenerson
.
BACKGROUND
FACTS
17.
The matter commenced when the appellants applied to the third
respondent for dispute resolution.
They each filled in a prescribed
form. The detail of the complaint is scant. In the part of the form
where they must set out the
alleged breach, the appellants make three
complaints. The first is that the first respondent body corporate has
no trustees and
has never called a general meeting; the second is
that they had not been given the required occupancy certificates; the
third is
that the City of Johannesburg wrongly classified the units
as business premises, when in fact they are residential, and which
resulted
in them having to pay higher assessment rates than they
should be paying.
18.
The complaint first went
to a conciliation process under the auspices of the third respondent.
A conciliation was held in October
2020 but was unsuccessful.
[7]
The dispute was then referred to an adjudicator. It is important to
mention here what we have of the record that served before
the
adjudicator. There is no transcript of the proceedings nor anything
in the form of pleadings. The record commences with a complaint
form.
This is a standard pre-printed form which the complainant then
completes in designated blocks. In the present case this is
what the
appellants have done. They made three complaints, which were filled
in in manuscript, each one sentence long.
19.
In addition, at some later stage, presumably after the failed
conciliation process, the
appellants had an attorney file a more
comprehensive submission in the form of correspondence. There is also
a letter from an attorney
representing the body corporate, which
appears to be a response to the complaint.
20.
The final document we have is the ‘adjudication order’
made by adjudicator.
In the award, which takes the form of an order
accompanied by reasons, the adjudicator describes the relief the
appellants sought
in the following terms:
“
(a)
The
Respondent be compelled to hold the first meeting in accordance with
section 2(1) of the Act, within 2 (two) weeks of the granting
of the
order in this matter;
(b)
The Respondent is compelled to furnish the update occupancy
certificates for unit 10 and 17;
(c)
The Respondent is
compelled to ensure that the Applicants are getting billed on the
correct tariff and the complex is correctly
categorized. The
Respondent must ensure attend to correcting the categorization of the
property within 90 days of the order being
handed down.”
[8]
21.
The appellants accept that the adjudicator adequately summarised the
relief they sought.
22.
The adjudicator awarded them their relief in respect of the occupancy
certificates. This
then leaves as the issues to be decided on the
appeal the calling of the first meeting of the trustees of the body
corporate and
the correct tariff categorisation.
23.
At the end of the reasons the adjudicator dismissed the relief in
respect of
the first meeting and the correct tariff. As a shorthand I
will refer to these as the ‘meeting’ relief and the
‘tariff’
relief from now on. Whilst reasons were given
for dismissing the tariff relief, scant reasons were given for the
dismissal of the
meeting relief. The body corporate must have made
submissions on both these issues. I come to this conclusion because
in paragraph
24 of his reasons, the adjudicator states: “
The
Respondent
[the body corporate]
submitted that the development
was attended to legally with all formal procedures that had to be
complied with.”
It is possible without more having been
said that the reason the meeting relief was not granted was because
based on these representations
from the body corporate the
adjudicator was satisfied that the meeting had been held.
24.
On the subject of the tariff relief the adjudicator refers to a
report from a town planner
Beth Heydenrych. He mentions that the
report was submitted by the appellants although it is more likely it
was referred to him
by body corporate as it is addressed to the body
corporate’s then attorney of record. But regardless of whoever
was responsible
for placing the report before the adjudicator, he
relied upon it to come to his decision. The town planner explains in
the report
that the erf on which the appellants units are situated is
a mixed-use area as it has ground floor shops with business premises
above. For that reason, the town planner says, the City has correctly
zoned the area as ‘Business 1’. However, she
seems to
accept that the residents have been billed incorrectly as businesses.
But she apportions the blame for this not on the
zoning but on the
City’s rates department, which in her words: “
find
such mixed zonings complicated and difficult to deal with as these
officials look at zoning simplistically and do not pay any
attention
to the nuances of what uses are actually allowed and approved.”
25.
Although his reasons are not particularly clear on this point it
appears that
the adjudicator accepted that the fault for the rates
problem lay with the City and not the body corporate, and hence he
refused
the relief sought.
DOES
THE APPEAL RAISE QUESTIONS OF LAW
26.
Once a party proceeds with an appeal in terms of the Act, its appeal
must, in the language
of section 57(1), be confined to a “
question of law
”.
27.
The appellants need to persuade this court on the record that the
appeal in respect of the
two issues raises questions of law, within
the meaning of that phrase in section 57(1).
28.
In relation to the first
issue, the meeting relief, it is not apparent, particularly given the
paucity of the reasons, that the
rejection of this relief involves a
question of law. The adjudicator does mention that the body corporate
had stated that all the
formalities had been followed. This appears
to emanate from a letter from the body corporate’s then
attorney, which from
the submissions in the record must have been
placed before the adjudicator. The adjudicator’s finding
appears to be a factual
finding that there was compliance. That no
reasoning is evident in the award does not elevate this to a question
of law. No facts
are before this court to identify what the question
of law is
[9]
other than the
outcome of the relief sought and the absence of reasons for that
outcome. This may be a good point on a review
[10]
but is not a question of law as envisaged in section 57(1) of the
Act. We sit in this matter as an appeal court, particularly given
the
procedure prescribed by
Stenersen
,
not a review court.
29.
Mr Alli who appeared for
the appellants argued that an ‘error of law’ may equate
to a question of law, with reference
to paragraph 92 of
Genesis
Medical Schemes v Registrar of Medical Schemes and another
2017 (9) BCLR 1164
(CC),
which describes as an error of law ‘
if
an administrative functionary misconstrues the enabling provision or
misapplies it.”
But
that is not what has happened in the present case. There is no
evidence that the adjudicator either misconstrued the enabling
provisions of the Act or misapplied them, other than having provided
no or inadequate reasons
[11]
.
30.
If I assume in favour of the appellants that there had been a failure
to give adequate reasons
and this failure might amount to a
reviewable failure of administrative justice, it does not follow that
an appeal in terms of
section 57 was the correct remedy for the
appellants to have followed.
31.
As Unterhalter J held in
Turley Manor Body Corporate v Pillay and
others
[2020] JOL 46770
(GJ) in relation to this issue, in
paragraph 18:
“…
, an
appeal as to whether a finding of law made by the adjudicator was
correct does not generally implicate the grounds upon which
a
decision may be reviewable. Review grounds, as is well known,
traverse different issues. Whether the adjudicator enjoyed the
power
to act as he did, or whether he acted fairly or rationally or upon
relevant considerations or was biased are all matters
that cannot be
determined on the basis that the adjudicator made an error of law.
Reviewable irregularities almost always depend
upon the proof of some
facts. Furthermore, grounds of review usually depend upon facts that
formed no part of the evidence before
the adjudicator. The review may
turn upon the interpretation of the empowering provisions under which
the adjudicator acts, none
of which may have enjoyed any
consideration by the adjudicator. These well understood grounds of
review cannot be determined on
appeal on the basis that the
adjudicator made an error of law.”
32.
Unterhalter J in
Turley Manor
went on to find that the
existence of a section 57 appeal in terms of the Act does not
preclude parties from invoking their rights
by way of a review in
terms of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act no 3 of 2000
(“PAJA”). As the court put
it in paragraph 24:
“
I find that
section 57 in no way curtails the right of persons to exercise their
rights under PAJA to bring orders of an adjudicator
under judicial
review. It follows that the failure by Turley to exercise a right of
appeal in terms of section 57 does not prevent
Turley from exercising
its right to review the order made by the adjudicator. An appeal
under section 57 is a right to challenge
an order on the basis that
the adjudicator made an error of law. That right does not exclude
Turley's right to challenge the order
by way of review. These rights
complement each other. The failure to exercise one right does not
exclude the exercise of the other
right.”
33.
The meeting issue in the appeal does not, on the record, raise a
question of law and hence
fails.
34.
In relation to the second issue, that of the incorrect tariff being
levied,
the adjudicator has given reasons which follow the advice of
the town planner that this is effectively a problem between the
appellants
and the City and not as between the appellants and the
first respondent body corporate. The City is responsible for the
billing
and if the wrong tariff is being levied, this is a matter for
the appellants to take up with the City. The rates account that is
part of the record indicates that the appellants are billed directly
for rates by the City, not by the body corporate. There does
not
appear to us to be any question of law that was incorrectly decided
by the adjudicator.
35.
In any event, the tariff
issue was not a matter over which the adjudicator had jurisdiction in
terms of the Act
[12]
.
36.
The appeal in relation to the tariff issue must too fail.
37.
It is not necessary to make any order for costs. The first and second
respondents did not
oppose the appeal. And no costs order was sought
against the third respondent.
ORDER
38.
The appeal is dismissed.
39.
There is no order as to costs.
Manoim
J
I
agree.
Gilbert
AJ
Date
of
hearing:
4 August 2022
Date
of
judgment:
6 September 2022
Counsel
for the
appellants:
Mr Y Alli
Instructed
by:
Mortimer Govender Attorneys
No
appearance for first and second respondents
Counsel
for the third respondent:
Ms Cathryn Read
Instructed
by:
Moja Sibiya Attorneys
[1]
See para 38 and the order at 661
[2]
Trustees,
Avenues Body Corporate v Shmaryahu and Another
2018 (4) SA 566
(WCC)
and
Durdoc
Centre Body Corporate v Singh
2019
(6) SA 45 (KZP).
[3]
[2020] ZAWCHC 92
(4 September 2020).
[4]
Para 8
[5]
Paras 4 to 6
[6]
See the discussion in Hahlo & Kahn
The
South Africa Legal System and Its Background
(Juta) 1968 at p 252.
[7]
There is a form entitled a ‘Certificate of non-resolution’
in the record, but it gives no detail beyond stating that
the
conciliation was unsuccessful.
[8]
There was also an issue of costs but that is not relevant to the
present appeal.
[9]
Which may demonstrate a shortcoming of the procedure on appeal being
that it is brought on notice of appeal confined to the record
and
the adjudicator’s order and reasons (
Stenersen
para 42), rather than on
affidavit.
[10]
In their treatise
Administrative
Law in South Africa
(3
rd
ed) at p 626, Hoexter
and Penfold note that the giving of reasons is: “
widely
regarded as one of the more fundamental requirements of
administrative justice and a component of procedural fairness”.
They also note that
there is not only a duty to give reasons but also adequate reasons
[11]
Section 54(1)(c) of the Act.
[12]
The
relief that can be granted by an adjudicator in terms of the Act is
limited to that set out in section 39 of the Act.
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