The applicant, Noelen Zolile Mbatha, is the registered owner of Unit 5 in the Silverdale sectional title scheme in Durban. She discovered that her unit water meter reflected zero consumption and reported the problem to the body corporate and its managing agents in May 2022. The respondent allegedly confirmed that the meter was faulty. The applicant later received estimated water charges, communicated by the managing agents in August 2022, together with an offer of a payment arrangement. She contended that the estimated charges were unreasonably high and that she was prejudiced because the respondent had failed to repair the meter timeously after being alerted to the defect. She also argued that, because the meter was situated outside her unit, its repair fell within the body corporate’s responsibility under the scheme rules and not her own. The respondent, through its managing agents, stated that meter readings were taken monthly, that the applicant had been informed the charges would be averaged while the meter was faulty, and that the meter had historically been installed at owners’ cost by an independent contractor, so the body corporate was not responsible for maintaining it.
The application was dismissed in terms of section 53(1)(a) of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 on the basis that it was misconceived. No order as to costs was made.
An applicant seeking relief under sections 39(1)(c) or 39(6)(a) of the CSOS Act must set out and prove, on a balance of probabilities, the factual and legal grounds entitling them to such relief as required by section 38(3)(c). Where a disputed water meter is found not to be municipal or body corporate property, but to be attached to and serve an individual unit’s supply line within that owner’s exclusive domain, the responsibility for its repair rests with the owner rather than the body corporate under the STSMA. Further, if scheme conduct rules conflict with the STSMA and its prescribed rules, the statute prevails.
The adjudicator observed, as a matter of practical reasoning or 'common-sense', that the common water supply pipe to the scheme is common property, but the individual supply pipe from that common line to a specific unit is for the exclusive use of that unit and therefore falls under that owner’s responsibility. The adjudicator also remarked that the applicant appears to have been misinformed about the scope of her maintenance obligations under the conduct rules.
The matter is significant within community schemes and sectional title governance because it illustrates the limits of relief available under the CSOS Act where an applicant does not properly establish factual and legal grounds for a complaint. It also reflects the distinction under the STSMA between the body corporate’s duty to maintain common property and an owner’s duty to maintain installations associated with that owner’s section or exclusive use area. The adjudication further confirms that conduct rules cannot prevail over the STSMA where there is inconsistency.