Ash Singh, the registered owner of unit 27 in Casa Blanca Body Corporate, brought a dispute-resolution application to the Community Schemes Ombud Service under section 38 of the CSOS Act. The trustees of the body corporate had disconnected electricity supply to his unit. Singh alleged that the body corporate was also attempting to force owners onto a prepaid electricity meter system without proper process, and that there had been no AGM for approximately two years after a change in managing agents. He stated that he was still receiving levy statements from the previous managing agent and that his levy arrears were linked to the change of managing agents. He sought reconnection of electricity and an order compelling the body corporate to convene an AGM and present audited annual financial statements. The trustees opposed the application, contending that the prepaid meter process had been lawfully resolved upon and that Singh was substantially in arrears with levies, approximately R22 300, equivalent to 8 to 9 months' arrears. They also stated that trustees were in the process of determining a date for the AGM and that the previous managing agent's contract had been terminated but was the subject of pending court proceedings.
The application succeeded in part. The adjudicator granted relief under section 39(7)(b) of the CSOS Act, ordered the respondent immediately to restore full electricity supply to unit 27, and directed the respondent not to disconnect electricity to the applicant's unit unless and until it obtained a court order authorising such disconnection. The request for an order compelling the calling of a general meeting/AGM under section 39(4)(a) was refused. No order as to costs was made.
A body corporate has no power under the sectional titles/community schemes framework to disconnect an owner's electricity supply as a means of enforcing payment of levies or resolving disputes unless it has obtained a court order authorising that interference. Deprivation of essential services in those circumstances constitutes unlawful self-help, and the affected owner is entitled to restoration of the status quo. By contrast, relief compelling the convening of a general meeting under section 39(4)(a) may be refused where the evidence does not show that the association is unwilling or failing, in a manner justifying immediate adjudicative intervention, to convene the meeting.
The adjudicator observed that issues concerning the legality of the prepaid meter rollout and disputes about the managing agent were not properly ventilated on the papers and did not form part of the main relief sought. The adjudicator also noted the obligation under Prescribed Management Rule 17(1) of the STSMA for a body corporate to convene an AGM within four months of the financial year end, and remarked that the purpose of an AGM includes consideration of annual financial statements. These observations informed context but were not the basis for the operative order on electricity restoration.
The decision reinforces, within the CSOS adjudication context, the South African law principle that bodies corporate may not engage in self-help by disconnecting essential services to enforce levy payment or compliance. It confirms that disputes over arrear levies must be pursued through lawful recovery mechanisms and that electricity supply may only be interrupted pursuant to proper judicial authority. The case is also significant for showing the limited circumstances in which CSOS will compel an AGM: a statutory obligation to hold one exists, but coercive relief may be refused where there is insufficient evidence of a refusal or failure warranting immediate intervention.