The dispute arose within the sectional title scheme known as Montpark Drakens. The first applicant was the body corporate established under s 36(6) of the Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986; the second to fifth applicants were trustees; and the sixth applicant was the managing agent. The respondent, Michiel Smuts, was an owner of one of the units. Smuts had previously served briefly as a trustee and chairman in 1996–1997, after which relations deteriorated. Over several years, the applicants alleged that Smuts pursued a sustained campaign against the body corporate, trustees, managing agent, auditor, and other service providers. This included repeated defamatory and abusive correspondence, questioning the validity of trustees' appointments, distributing hostile circulars to residents, laying complaints against service providers, making unreasonable and repetitive demands for documents and information, threatening legal proceedings and adverse publicity, disrupting meetings, withholding levies to test the trustees, and generally undermining the administration of the scheme. The papers were extensive, running to about 700 pages. Although Smuts denied much of the conduct and said he was merely asserting his rights as a unit owner, the court found that the applicants had broadly established the pattern of conduct complained of. The applicants sought wide-ranging interdictory relief, including restraints on Smuts communicating with others, lodging complaints, instituting proceedings, or publishing material without prior leave of court, as well as interdicts against defamation and against interfering with the administration of the body corporate and its meetings.
The court granted a final interdict restraining the respondent from disrupting or unlawfully interfering with the proper and efficient administration of the affairs of the first applicant, and from disrupting or unlawfully interfering with the proper and efficient conduct of business at any annual general meeting, special general meeting, and any meeting of trustees of the first applicant. The broader screening interdicts and defamation interdicts were refused. The respondent was ordered to pay the costs of the application on the attorney-and-client scale.
A body corporate, its trustees and managing agents under the Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986 are entitled, by necessary implication from their statutory duties, to perform their functions without unnecessary or improper interference, and a court may grant a final interdict to restrain an owner whose conduct unlawfully disrupts the proper and efficient administration of the scheme and its meetings. However, broad prior-leave 'screening' interdicts restricting a person's ability to communicate, complain, litigate, or seek publicity are not competent outside recognised statutory or procedural mechanisms such as the Vexatious Proceedings Act. Similarly, wide prior restraints on allegedly defamatory speech will not readily be granted where they are overbroad, threaten constitutional free expression, and where adequate alternative remedies such as damages actions exist.
The court observed that if Smuts persisted in threatening legal action without pursuing it, the applicants might consider seeking an edict of perpetual silence. The judge also remarked that the law of nuisance might raise an interesting question as to whether its traditional limits could be extended to conduct of this kind, but found it unnecessary to decide that issue. In addition, the court made broader comments about the importance of mutual respect and forbearance in communal sectional title living, and noted that prior restraints on speech require compelling reasons because of their drastic effect on freedom of expression.
The case is significant for South African sectional titles law and civil interdict practice because it recognises that trustees and managing agents of a body corporate have a legally protectable right to perform their statutory functions without improper interference by an owner. It also illustrates judicial caution in granting broad prior restraints on speech and communications, especially where such orders would trench on freedom of expression and access to courts. The judgment therefore draws an important distinction between permissible interdicts against disruptive interference in administration and impermissibly wide 'screening' or speech-restraining orders.