The applicant, Harold Leonard Basson, is the owner of Unit 10 in the Harbour Island Masters Homeowners Association in Gordon's Bay. He challenged clause 10.2 of the 19 January 2019 Architectural Design Guidelines, which prohibited double-storey buildings in the San Juan Precinct. He alleged that this clause had been introduced unilaterally by the association without notice to residents, without consultation, and without the meetings and majority vote required by the association's Memorandum of Incorporation (MOI). The applicant requested proof of the meetings, voting, and consultation allegedly authorising the clause, but none was provided. The respondent largely denied the allegations in bare terms and did not meaningfully participate or produce evidence justifying the clause's adoption. The adjudicator compared the earlier 2004 and 2016 guidelines and found that clause 10.2 did not appear there, but was only introduced in the 2019 guidelines.
Clause 10.2 of the Architectural Design Guidelines was declared invalid, and the respondent was ordered to remove it from the Architectural Design Guidelines within 30 days of the order. The request compelling production of proof of meetings, voting, and consultation was refused as moot. No order as to costs was made.
Where a homeowners association's MOI requires that proposed rules or amendments, including architectural/design rules, be approved by a majority vote of members before they may be introduced and enforced, a clause inserted into architectural guidelines without proof of such consultation and approval is invalid. In CSOS proceedings, where an applicant shows that a disputed rule appeared only in a later version and the association fails to produce evidence that the prescribed procedure was followed, the adjudicator may declare the provision invalid and order its removal under section 39 of the CSOS Act.
The adjudicator observed generally that the ability to self-govern is the cornerstone of community schemes. The adjudicator also noted the general approach to evidence in adjudication proceedings, namely that relevant evidence must be assessed on a balance of probabilities with regard to credibility and probabilities. These remarks were contextual and not themselves the decisive basis of the order.
The decision is important in South African community schemes law because it affirms that homeowners associations must comply with their own constitutive instruments when adopting or amending governance and architectural rules. It underscores that even where a board has managerial authority, it cannot unilaterally impose new restrictions affecting owners unless the MOI-prescribed approval process has been followed. The case illustrates the remedial role of the CSOS under section 39 in policing unlawful scheme governance provisions and protecting members against procedurally defective rule changes.