The applicant, Pieter Zerwick, is the owner of unit 3 in Simonsvlei Body Corporate. He alleged that his unit had suffered recurring damage to kitchen cupboards caused by rising damp, which he said originated from external/common-property conditions because the scheme is built on a vlei with a high water table. He claimed reimbursement of R40 000 for repairs done in August 2023, contending that prior expert reports and inspections had confirmed the damp problem and that the body corporate had failed for years to resolve it. The respondent body corporate opposed the claim, stating that the applicant bought the unit with existing damp issues, that previous CSOS matters concerning similar claims had been dismissed, and that in November 2022 the applicant had appointed his own contractor, UltiFix, allegedly linked to his wife, to treat the damp problem without proper disclosure or authorisation. The respondent further contended that it had not been given an opportunity to inspect the alleged damage, that no satisfactory report was provided by the contractor, and that the invoice relied upon did not prove that the work was done at unit 3 of Simonsvlei. The dispute was adjudicated on the papers under the CSOS Act after conciliation failed.
The application was dismissed. The relief sought under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act for payment of R40 000 by the respondent to the applicant was refused. There was no order as to costs.
A unit owner claiming reimbursement from a body corporate under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act must prove on a balance of probabilities that the body corporate is legally liable for the amount claimed. Where the owner undertakes repairs unilaterally, appoints a contractor without proper authorisation or disclosure, fails to provide the body corporate with an opportunity to inspect the damage, and fails to produce adequate proof linking the repairs and damage to the scheme and to the body corporate's legal obligations, the body corporate cannot be compelled to reimburse the owner. The body corporate is not liable for damages arising from work it did not commission or authorise.
The adjudicator made general observations that decisions affecting the scheme should be discussed at AGMs and other meetings, that attendance and participation by owners are important, and that the body corporate's finances did not presently accommodate a full damp-remediation project although temporary measures had been contemplated. The adjudicator also remarked on an apparent conflict of interest concerning the contractor allegedly linked to the applicant's wife and referred to prior disputes and the broader damp history of the scheme. These comments were contextual and not strictly necessary to the ultimate dismissal of the reimbursement claim.
The matter is significant within the community schemes context because it illustrates that, even where a body corporate may bear general responsibility for maintaining common property under the STSMA, an owner seeking reimbursement through CSOS must still prove causation, liability, and the quantum of the claim with adequate evidence. It also underscores that unilateral repairs by an owner, undertaken without proper notice, inspection, authorisation, or supporting reports, may defeat a reimbursement claim against a body corporate. The decision further highlights the importance of distinguishing between common-property obligations and section-owner responsibilities in sectional title disputes.