Delpech v Holloway and Others (18282/2010) [2010] ZAGPJHC 78; 2011 (2) SA 194 (GSJ) (24 August 2010)

80 Reportability
Land and Property Law

Brief Summary

Property Law — Share block scheme — Dispute over levies and cancellation of use agreement — Applicant purchased a share block and entered into a use agreement but disputed the allocation of levies and other charges with the respondents, who were linked to the developer — Respondents purported to cancel the use agreement and repossess the share block due to alleged non-payment of levies — Court held that the respondents could not exercise their rights under the lien as there were genuine disputes regarding the amounts owed, and the process followed was incompetent — Relief granted to declare the respondents' actions legally invalid.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an urgent motion application in the South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg, in which the applicant sought primarily restorative and declaratory relief arising from the respondents’ attempts to enforce levy-related claims within a share block scheme by cancelling a use and occupation agreement, excluding the applicant from her unit, and effecting a transfer-like “buy-back” of her share block interest.


The applicant was Caron Kate Delpech, the holder (by purchase and cession) of Share Block No. 2 in the third respondent share block company, together with the associated use and occupation rights to a chalet/unit in the development. The first respondent, Margaret Holloway, was a director of the share block company and the managing agent of the scheme; together with her husband she held the members’ interests in the second respondent. The second respondent, Holloway Investments CC, was the developer and original holder of the relevant share block interests prior to sales. The third respondent, Zululand Craft Centre Lodge Share Block (Pty) Ltd, was the share block company and counterparty to the use and occupation agreement.


Procedurally, the matter came before Spilg J on application papers in which the applicant challenged the legal competence of the respondents’ actions and sought orders restoring possession, confirming ownership and validity of the ceded use agreement, and interdicting interference. The dispute concerned the respondents’ purported enforcement of alleged levy and related indebtedness, including special levies and legal costs, and their reliance on contractual mechanisms (described as a lien under the use agreement) to justify cancellation, exclusion from occupation, and a form of self-help realisation of the applicant’s interest.


2. Material Facts


The undisputed background was that the applicant purchased Share Block No. 2 from the developer (the second respondent) in the third respondent share block company, and in doing so took cession of the second respondent’s right, title and interest in a linked use and occupation agreement. The arrangement gave the applicant exclusive rights to occupy a defined unit (a chalet constructed on an allocated portion of land) and non-exclusive rights to use the common areas of the development.


It was common cause that the second respondent undertook, under the sale agreement, to construct a chalet on the allocated area and that the applicant took occupation during October 2007. The development comprised six units. At the time material to the application, only two units were developed and sold/allocated for occupation: one to the applicant and one to the first respondent. The remaining four share blocks remained held by the developer. The applicant had paid the full purchase price for her acquisition.


A dispute then arose concerning the basis on which levies and expenses were to be shared. The court treated it as established on the papers that there had been a recorded meeting (annexure “JM5”) reflecting an understanding that some expenditure would be shared equally between the two occupied units (for example, certain domestic worker and cleaning consumables), while other expenditure would be allocated with reference to the scheme as a whole, in which case the applicant would bear a one-sixth share. Although the monthly levy figure recorded differed slightly from what was later charged, the document was relied upon to show an acknowledged principle of differentiated allocation depending on the nature of the cost.


On the papers, the court regarded as materially significant that the alleged arrears were not presented as simple non-payment of ordinary levies, but were linked to genuine disputes about special levies and other charges raised from time to time. The documentation (including annexure “RA1”) reflected that the “difference” said to be outstanding was attributed mainly to legal costs, alongside other contested items. One item included an “accommodation bill” (R24 960) for a period in December/January, said by the respondents to reflect continued occupation notwithstanding alleged default and exclusion; there were also amounts raised as a special levy in relation to an accumulated loss which the applicant disputed, including on the basis that there was no proper resolution or meeting formalising such liability.


A further fact treated as important was that, in relation to the accumulated loss, the respondents (effectively under the Holloways’ control) split the total amount equally between the two owners, rather than applying a one-sixth allocation with reference to all six units in the scheme.


Against this background, the third respondent purported to act under clause 11.1 of the use agreement (described as giving a lien in respect of unpaid levies and amounts due). In the latter part of 2009, the third respondent purported to cancel the use agreement, repossess the applicant’s share block, and dispose of the interest by “taking back” the share block and effectively transferring it to the Holloways for under R250 000, despite the original purchase price being nearly double. The court also noted, on the papers before it, that the disposal appeared to have been treated as if it could only be sold to another share block member, and that there had been no demonstrated basis (such as produced constitutional documents) to justify such a limitation or to show that the share block could not have been sold on the open market.


3. Legal Issues


The central questions for determination were whether, in the circumstances of this dispute about levy liability and related charges, the third respondent (and those acting through it) was legally entitled to:


The first issue was whether the respondents could realise the applicant’s share block interest and associated occupation rights through what the court characterised as an exercise of parate executie (self-help execution) based on the clause 11.1 “lien” and the alleged indebtedness, despite the existence of a bona fide dispute about the amounts said to be due.


The second issue was whether the third respondent could competently cancel the use and occupation agreement, eject/exclude the applicant from access and occupation, and then reacquire and dispose of the share block interest in the manner described, without first having the underlying disputed indebtedness determined through appropriate legal process.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal principles to largely common-cause structural facts, together with an evaluative determination on the papers as to whether the levy and charge disputes were genuine and bona fide and sufficiently material to preclude self-help realisation of security.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter through the lens of the law governing parate executie and the nature of the security relied upon. It accepted that the leading authority on parate executie in the context of a pledge (rather than a lien) was Bock and Others v Duburoro Investments (Pty) Ltd 2004 (2) SA 242 (SCA). From that case the court drew the proposition that while parate executie may not in itself be unconstitutional and a pactum commissorium may be enforceable in a pledge context, the exercise of such powers remains constrained where due legal process is required, particularly when a bona fide dispute exists before the alleged right of disposal is exercised.


The court then emphasised the distinction between a pledge and a lien. On the court’s characterisation, the third respondent held no more than a lien, which is security for a debt and does not itself confer a right of execution. The court referred in this regard to S A Bank of Athens Ltd v Van Zyl 2005 (5) SA 93, citing the principle (as the court had previously expressed in the court a quo and as affirmed) that because security is accessory to the main debt, where the underlying obligation is disputed, the security cannot be realised until the dispute is resolved by a court; executing prior to such determination amounts to taking the law into one’s own hands.


Applying those principles, the court held that the applicant had, on the papers, raised a bona fide dispute about amounts levied or otherwise charged well before the third respondent purported to exercise rights under clause 11.1. The court considered it material that the alleged outstanding amounts related substantially to contested items (including legal costs and special levies) rather than straightforward non-payment of ordinary levies, and that there were unresolved issues as to the proper allocation basis (equal split between two developed units versus a one-sixth share referencing the six-unit scheme). In the court’s view, these unresolved disputes meant that the third respondent could not lawfully proceed to realise the “security” by cancellation and repossession, and could not competently effect the reacquisition and onward disposal of the applicant’s interest in the manner attempted.


The court also dealt with the respondents’ asserted entitlement under the use agreement to preclude access for as long as levies remained unpaid. It accepted that such an entitlement could exist under the agreement in principle, but held that in the present matter the disputes on the papers remained unresolved and genuine. The court reasoned that, at best, there was a need for a formal resolution determining the basis on which any loss or special levy would be borne (including whether the applicant’s liability could properly exceed one-sixth of the total loss). As that process had not been properly implemented, the court held it was premature to enforce exclusion of access pending proper determination. If the applicant’s defences were later rejected in appropriate proceedings, the third respondent could then exercise rights consistent with the agreement.


A further evaluative component in the reasoning was the court’s disapproval of the mechanism by which the share block interest was “taken in” and then disposed of to the scheme’s controlling mind without an attempt to offer it on the open market. The court considered that the potential prejudice inherent in such a process far outweighed the existence of a valuation and regarded market exposure as the appropriate means of determining fairness rather than reliance on a valuation alone, particularly in the context of contested indebtedness and self-help enforcement.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court concluded that the purported exercise of the lien, the cancellation, the ejectment/exclusion, the repurchase of the share block, and the restriction of access were not legally competent in the circumstances. It therefore granted the substantive relief sought in the notice of motion.


The respondents were ordered to restore vacant possession of the chalet to the applicant. The court declared the applicant to be the owner of Share Block No. 2 in the third respondent. It further declared that the use and occupation agreement had been ceded by the second respondent to the applicant and remained valid, binding, and in full force and effect. The court granted an interdict preventing and restraining the respondents from making use of the property and/or letting it out except with the applicant’s express consent and otherwise in terms of the use and occupation agreement.


On costs, the court ordered that the costs of the application be paid jointly and severally by the first, second, and third respondents, with the qualification that the third respondent may not look to the applicant for any portion of such costs for which the third respondent was liable.


Cases Cited


Bock and Others v Duburoro Investments (Pty) Ltd 2004 (2) SA 242 (SCA).


S A Bank of Athens Ltd v Van Zyl 2005 (5) SA 93.


Legislation Cited


Companies Act (referred to generally in relation to features of share block schemes).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that where a share block company relies on a contractual clause described as a lien to secure payment of levies and related charges, it may not, in the face of a genuine and bona fide dispute about the underlying indebtedness, proceed to cancel the use agreement, exclude the member from occupation, repossess the share block interest, or dispose of it through a mechanism amounting to parate executie. A lien is security and does not itself confer a right of execution, and any realisation of the security requires proper process once the dispute about the debt has been lawfully determined. The court accordingly restored the applicant’s possession, confirmed her ownership of the share block interest and the continuing validity of the ceded use agreement, and interdicted interference, with costs against the respondents jointly and severally (subject to the stated qualification).


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A purported parate executie mechanism cannot be competently exercised where there is a bona fide dispute regarding the underlying indebtedness, and due legal process is required before any disposal of property can occur in such circumstances, as reflected in the application of Bock and Others v Duburoro Investments (Pty) Ltd 2004 (2) SA 242 (SCA).


A lien constitutes security for a debt and does not confer a free-standing right of execution; because security is accessory to the principal debt, where the underlying obligation is disputed, the security cannot be realised until the dispute has been resolved through proper legal process, consistent with the approach referred to in S A Bank of Athens Ltd v Van Zyl 2005 (5) SA 93.


Contractual entitlements within a use and occupation agreement to restrict access for non-payment cannot be enforced prematurely where the existence and extent of the alleged default remains subject to unresolved genuine disputes on the papers, particularly where allocation of levies or losses depends on processes (such as proper resolutions) that have not been shown to have been duly implemented.

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[2010] ZAGPJHC 78
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Delpech v Holloway and Others (18282/2010) [2010] ZAGPJHC 78; 2011 (2) SA 194 (GSJ) (24 August 2010)

SOUTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Not Reportable
CASE NO
:
18282/2010
DATE:
24/08/2010
In the matter between:
CARON KATE
DELPECH
Applicant
and
MARGARET
HOLLOWAY
First
Respondent
HOLLOWAY
INVESTMENTS CC
Second Respondent
ZULULAND
CRAFT
CENTRE
LODGE SHARE
BLOCK (PTY)
LTD
Third Respondent
J U D G M E N T
SPILG, J
:
[1] The
applicant purchased from the second respondent
,
which is a developer, Share Block No. 2 in the third respondent. The
Third Respondent is the share block company. In terms of
this
transaction, and linked to Share Block no 2, the applicant took
cession of the second respondent’s right, title and
interest in
and to a use and occupation agreement. The effect of the transaction
was to give the Applicant exclusive title to a
piece of land, or
unit, on which a chalet was built and non-exclusive use of the common
areas within the entire development.
[2] The first
respondent is a director of the share block company and together with
her husband holds the members interests in
the developer. The first
respondent is also the managing agent of the share block scheme
operated by the third respondent.
[3] In terms
of the sale agreement the second respondent undertook to construct a
chalet on a specified area of land allocated
for this purpose in
terms of the use agreement. During October 2007 the applicant was
able to take occupation of the chalet. There
are in total six units,
of which (at the time relevant to these proceedings) only two were
developed and acquired from the developer,
one by the applicant and
the other by the first respondent. The balance of the development and
the four remaining Share Blocks
it represents remains held by
developer.
The applicant
paid the full purchase price for the acquisition of the share block
and use agreement. In a share block scheme the
developer initially
holds all the “shares” in the development and divests
itself of those blocks of shares allocated
to a unit in the
development as and when the relevant unit (in this case a chalet) is
sold. In this way the person acquiring the
share block obtains
effectively full rights of occupation and disposal of the chalet as
if that person was the owner together with
the common area use
rights.
[4] A dispute
arose between the applicant and the first respondent with regard to
how the levies were to be split. Part of the
difficulty is that
amounts that may have been owed in respect of the entire share block
were sought to be appropriated to the applicant
and first respondent
in equal shares. This did not necessarily prejudice the first
respondent because she and her husband through
the second respondent
effectively were the developers. A second bone of contention was the
attempt by the second respondent to
claim, through charges raised by
the third respondent and which it split between the applicant and the
first respondent, legal
expenses incurred in engaging attorneys to
deal with the dispute it had with the applicant regarding the proper
split of expenses
between her and the first and second respondents.
The applicant contended that these were amounts were not for her
account.
[5] The issue
of the basic levies and what amounts ought to be raised appears to
have been resolved in terms of a meeting held
and which was recorded
by the first respondent in a document identified as annexure “JM5”.
It reveals that certain
amounts (such as for a domestic worker and
for cleaning consumables) were to be divided equally between the
applicant and the first
respondent despite there being a total of six
units whereas other amounts (for instance, in relation to garden
security) were to
be split on the basis of the applicant being liable
for a one-sixth share. The final figure identified as a monthly levy
in terms
of this document is slightly different to that in fact
charged. Nonetheless this document does establish the principle
that, as
between the applicant, the second respondent and the third
respondent, there was an acknowledgement that certain expenditure was

incurred only in respect of the two completed chalets to which the
applicant and the first respondent had rights whereas other

expenditure was split by reference to the total area of the
development and for which the applicant was only liable for a
one-sixth
portion.
[6] The
dispute with regard to certain special levies and other amounts
charged from time to time is evidence from the documents.
It is
apparent that these are genuine disputes between the parties and that
the amount that is alleged to be outstanding relates
to these
disputes rather than to a failure by the applicant to make payment of
levies in the ordinary course. This appears from
Annexure “RA1”
which basically sets out the levies paid by the applicant and
compares it (in the second column) to
the levies raised and invoiced
by the third respondent with a final column reflecting the difference
between the two amounts.
The difference between the two amounts is
attributed to legal costs in the main. There is also a claim for what
is referred to
as an accommodation bill from 14 December to 5 January
of R24 960. This is supposed to reflect the continued occupation by
the
applicant of the unit despite what is said by the respondents to
be an entitlement to preclude the applicant from occupying by reason

of the alleged default. This figure is significant when considering
the steps taken by the respondents (which are said to have
been steps
they were entitled to take) in the disposal of the applicant’s
right, title and interest to her members interest
in the share block.
Finally there are amounts that were simply raised by the third
respondent in relation to a special levy loss
of some R5 900. The
applicant contends that the loss was not due or payable as there had
been no resolution or meeting formalising
this as between those
entitled to attend.
It is
significant, in relation to the accumulated loss incurred and to
which the purported special levy was raised, that the respondents

(and for present purposes it is unnecessary to split the identity of
the respondents since effectively they had been controlled
by the
Holloways) split the total amount equally between the two share block
owners rather than a 1/6
th
split in relation to the total units that comprised the share block
scheme.
As a result of
the alleged default by the applicant of her obligations to make
payment in respect of the levy contributions and
the other amounts
that were raised as raised, the third respondent purported to
exercise its rights under the use agreement.
Clause 11.1 of
the use agreement entitles the third respondent to hold a lien over
each member’s share block in respect of
unpaid levies and other
amounts due by that member. During the latter part of 2009 the third
respondent purported to cancel the
use agreement and
to
repossess the applicant’s share block. Moreover, it then
purported to dispose of this interest by taking back the share
block
and effectively disposing of it to the Holloways for a consideration
of under R250 000,00 despite the original purchase price
being nearly
double that amount.
A
side
from claiming to have bought back the share block, it appears that
the share block was then disposed of on the basis that it
could only
be sold to another share block member. Although a share block scheme
adopts many of the provisions of the Companies
Act, ordinarily it
certainly does not envisage that an existing member must be given a
first or even exclusive option to acquire
another share block for
purposes of occupation. Share blocks are sold on the open market and
there is no impediment unless the
memorandum and articles of
association specifically limit the right of on-sale. Without such a
document being produced by the respondents
indicating that this is
indeed the case I will assume that, on an ordinary application of
share block structures, the share block
could have been disposed of
to any interested outsider. In my view this matter can be readily
disposed of on the basis that the
third respondent sought to exercise
a right of
parate
executi
in
circumstances where a genuine and
bona
fide
dispute had been raised well before the third respondent purported to
exercise its alleged rights. Moreover, it is offensive for
the third
respondent to take in the shares and then dispose of them to its
controlling mind without any attempt to offer it on
the open market.
The mere fact that a valuation is in existence cannot take the matter
further. The potential prejudice of allowing
such a process to occur
far outweighs the production of a valuation. In these circumstances
it is for the market to determine
the amount that is fair rather than
a document produced by a valuator.
[7] The
leading case on
parate
execute,
although it is in relation to a pledge as opposed to a lien, is
Bock
and Others v Duburoro Investments (Pty) Ltd
2004
(2) SA 242
(SCA). While the court recognised that
parate
execute
may not be unconstitutional and that a
pactum
commissorium
is enforceable in the context of a pledge, what is apparent is that
due legal process is required where there is a
bona
fide
dispute prior to the exercise of an alleged right to dispose of
property. In the present case the third respondent held no more
than
a lien
. A lien is simply security for a debt and does
not afford a right to execute. This distinguishes it from a pledge.
In this regard
I refer to
S
A Bank of Athens Ltd v Van Zyl
2005 (5) SA 93
at para [7] which dealt with the decision in the court
a
quo
where I had indicated that since security is accessory to the main
debt it follows that, until the existence of a disputed underlying

obligation is resolved by a court, the security cannot be realised.
In such a case the cessionary who executes
parate
executi
prior to such determination takes the law into its own hands.
Bock
affirms the principle that where an amount is in dispute then,
certainly in relation to a lien which is no more than security,
the
holder of the security cannot then execute upon it without more.
I have already
indicated that the
applicant
had raised a
bona
fide
dispute, regarding the amounts that may be levied or otherwise
charged, prior to the purported exercise of the rights afforded
to
the third respondent under the lien. While it is correct that under
the use agreement the third respondent is entitled to preclude
rights
of access for as long as levies remain unpaid, in the present case
there are unresolved genuine disputes on the papers.
At best there is
a need for a formal resolution in terms of which not more than
one-sixth of the loss for a particular financial
year is to be borne
by the applicant. That process does not appear to have been properly
implemented let alone any determination
that the applicant’s
obligation is not limited to one-sixth of the total loss.
For this
reason too the third respondent cannot at this stage enforce the
entitlement under the use agreement
to
preclude the applicant from gaining access to the chalet. The third
respondent will have to adopt the proper process. If a court
rejects
the applicant’s defences then the third respondent would be
entitled to exercise its rights. At this stage it is
premature.
CONCLUSION
[8] It ought
to be evident that the purported exercise of the lien, the
cancellation, the ejectment and repurchase of the share
block as well
as the restriction of access to the applicant are all incompetent.
The relief sought by the applicant was to declare
that the exercise
of these rights by the various respondents was not legally competent.
I accordingly grant the following prayers sought in the Notice of
Motion dated 8 June 2010:
Directing and
ordering
the respondents to restore vacant possession of the chalet to the
applicant.
Declaring the
applicant to be the owner of Share Block No. 2 in the third
respondent.
Declaring
that the use and occupation agreement entered into in respect of the
property has been ceded by the second respondent
to the applicant
and remains valid, binding and of full force and effect.
Preventing,
restraining and interdicting the respondent from making use of the
property and/or letting and hiring the property
out save with the
express consent of the applicant and otherwise in terms of the use
and occupation agreement.
O
rdering
that the costs of this application be paid jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved, by the first,
second and
the third respondent
save
that the third respondent may not look to the applicant for any
portion of such amount for which it is liable.
I accordingly grant orders in terms of prayers 1, 2, 3, 4 and 6 as
amended of the Notice of Motion of 8 June 2010.
____________________________
B
SPILG
JUDGE OF THE SOUTH GAUTENG
HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24 August 2010
FOR APPLICANT: Adv Greg Porteous
Barry Sim Attorneys
FOR RESPONDENT: Adv Nigel Riley
J. Mothobi Incorporated