Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 673South Africa
Dlamini v Van Den Bos N.O.: In re: Van Den Bos v Dlamini and Others (32507/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 673 (12 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 September 2022
Headnotes
judgment in the Magistrate Court against the applicant. The applicant was
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dlamini v Van Den Bos N.O.: In re: Van Den Bos v Dlamini and Others (32507/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 673 (12 September 2022)
Dlamini v Van Den Bos N.O.: In re: Van Den Bos v Dlamini and Others (32507/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 673 (12 September 2022)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No:
32507/2021
REPORTABLE:NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:NO
REVISED
12 September 2022
In the
matter between:
SUNNY
THABANG DLAMINI
Applicant
And
JAN
VAN DEN BOS N.O.
First Respondent
In
Re:
JAN
VAN DEN BOS N.O.
Applicant
And
SUNNY
THABANG DLAMINI
First Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Second Respondent
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
AGLIOTI
MICHELLE ISAURA
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
MATOJANE J
[1]
This is an application for the rescission of a default court order
granted by this
Court on 11 October 2022, declaring the first
respondent's property specially executable and authorizing the
issuing of a writ
of execution. The applicant opposes the
application.
[2]
The applicant is the registered owner of a Sectional title unit
described as door
number [....], unit [....] Pearlbrook Complex,
Located at [....] B [....] Street, Hillbrow, Johannesburg. Being a
unit in the scheme,
the applicant became a member of the body
corporate by operational law and is consequently liable to make
contributions raised
by the first respondent in the upkeep control
management and administration of the common property.
[3]
The first respondent is the administrator of the Pearlbrook Body
Corporate appointed
in terms of section 16 of the Sectional Title
Schemes Managing Act, act 8 of 2021. ("STMA")
[4]
The first respondent alleges that the applicant has failed to make
monthly payments
for levies and other ancillary charges incurred in
respect of the unit and remains indebted to the body corporate. As a
result,
the first respondent applied for and obtained summary
judgment in the Magistrate Court against the applicant. The applicant
was
ordered to pay the sum of R 119 119.15 and costs.
[5]
The applicant failed to satisfy the judgment debt, which led to the
first respondent
issuing an application in this Court to have the
applicant's property declared executable in terms of Rule 46A of the
Uniform Rules
of Court. A writ of execution as envisaged in terms of
Uniform Rule 46(1)(a) was authorized in respect of the property.
[6]
On 3 November 2021, the applicant brought an urgent application
seeking the stay of
the writ. The order was granted, interdicting the
first respondent from executing the order pending the outcome of this
application.
It is this execution order that the applicant seeks to
have rescinded in this application
Locus Standi
[7]
The applicant has raised a point
in limine
that the respondent
does not have locus
standi to
launch this application. This
in
limine
point originates from the wording of the order by which
the respondent was appointed as an administrator. The applicant
contends
that the order does not appoint the applicant as the
administrator of the body corporate but that it postpones the
commencement
of his appointment to be when a date for Part B of that
application is obtained, and no such date has been obtained. It is
appropriate
to quote the relevant paragraph of the order, which
admittedly is not properly worded; it reads"
"Jan van Bos N.O.
("the administrator) is appointed as administrator to the
respondent for a period, from where a date
obtained from the Court's
Honourable Registrar to hear Part B opposed and / or unopposed, from
a final appointment up to date of
appointment in terms of the
provisions of section 16 of Act 8 of 2011 ("the Act")"
[8]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in Endumeni
[1]
has
described the process of interpretation as involving a unitary
exercise of considering language, context and purpose. It is
an
objective exercise where, in the face of ambiguity, a sensible
approach is to be preferred to one which undermines the purpose
of
the document or order. The order and the Court's reasons for giving
it
must
be read as a whole to assert its intention
[2]
[9]
Section 16 (2)
(a)
of STMA points to an underlying purpose of
the order to be interpreted. It empowers a Magistrate to appoint an
Administrator where
she finds evidence of serious financial or
administrative mismanagement of the body corporate; and where there
is a reasonable
probability that, if it is placed under
administration, the body corporate will be able to meet its
obligations and be managed
in accordance with the requirements of
this Act.
[10]
The interpretation advanced by the applicant undermines the purpose
of the order. It will serve
no purpose for the commencement of the
appointment of an Administrator to be held back for an indefinite
period pending the hearing
of Part B in the face of serious financial
and administrative mismanagement of the corporate body found by the
Magistrate. It is
sensible for the interim appointment of the
administrator to take effect immediately to enable him to take charge
of the affairs
of the body corporate until the finalization of Part
B. Various courts of this division followed a similar approach.
There
is no suggestion that any of those judgments were manifestly wrongly
decided or that there has been a material change justifying
a
departure. Those judgments are binding on me. The point
in
limine
must accordingly fail.
[11]
The applicant states that the executability order should be set aside
under Uniform Rule 42(1)(a) because it was
erroneously sought or granted in his absence. Rule 42(1)(a) provides:
'(1) The
Court may, in addition to any other powers it may have, mero motu or
upon the application of any party affected,
rescind or vary:
(a)
An order or judgment erroneously
sought or erroneously granted in the absence of any party affected
thereby.'
[12]
The rule is not aimed at correcting a judgment that is wrong because
the Court arrived at a wrong
decision on the facts or the law.
In
Bakoven
[3]
,
the Court explained that:
"
An
order or judgment is 'erroneously granted' when the Court
commits an 'error' in the sense of 'a mistake
in a matter of law (or fact) appearing on the
proceedings of a Court of record' (The Shorter
Oxford
Dictionary). It follows that a Court in deciding
whether a judgment was 'erroneously granted' is,
like a Court
of Appeal, confined to the record of
proceedings."
[13]
Accordingly, if the order reflects a considered decision of the
presiding officer, and the intention
was to make the order as it is
formulated in the judgment, a rescission thereof in terms of rule 42
(1) (b) is not possible on
the basis that the reasoning and the
findings which underlie the order were unsound or wrong. The
appropriate remedy in such an
instance is to appeal the judgment
[4]
.
[14]
I now turn to consider the grounds upon which the applicant relies to
have the order set aside.
14.1 Firstly, the
applicant alleges that the executability application was heard
without his knowledge and that he was unaware
of the proceedings
being instituted against him in terms of Rule 46;
14.2 Secondly, the
applicant alleges that the first respondent did not comply with Rule
6(5)(b)(iii) in that the first respondent
allegedly set the matter
down eight days after allegedly serving the notice of motion on the
applicant.
14.3 Thirdly, the
applicant alleges that the failure of the first respondent to serve a
final notice of set down on him constituted
a "fatal error"
to the application.
14.4 Lastly, the
applicant alleges that the Court failed to take into consideration
Rule 46A(2)(a)-(b) of the Uniform Rules
of Court, in that the
property concerned is the primary residence of the applicant and that
the order is prejudicial to the applicant.
[15]
On the reading of the sheriff's returns before the Court, the
applicant was duly served with
the notice of motion for the
executability application on 15 September 2021. The notice was served
by affixing it at the domicilium
address. The second service was
effected on 28 September 2021 personally on the applicant. The notice
of motion indicated that
the applicant had to file a notice of
intention to oppose within 5 (five) days and that the matter would be
heard on the unopposed
roll on 11 October 2021. The applicant chose
not to file a notice of intention to defend, and the matter was set
down on the date
set out in the notice of motion. The applicant
cannot now claim that failure to serve a final notice of set down on
him constituted
a "fatal error" when he was made aware of
the date of the hearing on the unopposed roll.
[16]
The order reflects the intention of the Court, which considered the
evidentiary material placed
before it. The Court concluded that the
first respondent was procedurally entitled to the order.
In
Lodhi 2 Properties Investments CC
[5]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that where a plaintiff is
procedurally entitled to a judgment in the absence of the defendant,
that judgment cannot be said to have been granted erroneously in the
light of the subsequently disclosed defense. The existence
or
non-existence of a defense on the merits was found to be an
irrelevant consideration and, if subsequently disclosed, cannot
transform a validly obtained judgment into an erroneous judgment.
[17]
In my view, that the rescission of judgment in terms of Rule 42 is
not available to the applicant
as the Court did not commit an error
in the sense of a mistake in law appearing on the proceedings and the
application thus falls
to be dismissed. The applicant is attempting
to appeal the judgment in the guise of a rescission application which
should be deprecated
as this is an abuse of a court process. It is
not necessary to consider the rest of the grounds for rescission
application in light
of my finding that it is not possible to rely on
Rule 42(1)(a) where the decision was right.
[18]
In the result, the following order is make
1.
The application is dismissed with costs
KE
MATOJANE JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Heard:
31 August 2022
Judgment:
12 September 2022
For
the Applicant:
Advocate D Ndlovu
Instructed
by
Precious Muleya Inc Attorneys
For
the First Respondent:
Advocate N S Nxumalo
Instructed
by
Schüler Heerschop Pienaar Attorneys
[1]
2012
(4) SA (SCA) par [18]
[2]
Firestone
South Africa 9Pty) Ltd v Gentiruco AG v1977(4) SA 298 (A) aat 304
[3]
Bakoven
Ltd v G J Howes (Pty) Ltd
1992
(2) SA 466
(E)
(at 471F):
[4]
Seatle
v Protea Assurance Co Ltd
1984 (2) SA 537
(C) at 541
C-D
[5]
Lodhi
paras 25 and 27. See also Freedom Stationery (Pty) Limited and
Others v Hassam and Others
[2018] ZASCA 170
;
2019 (4) SA 459
(SCA)
para 18.
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