The applicant, Jeffrey Magongoe, was the occupier of unit 05 in Rock Ridge Body Corporate, Johannesburg. On 2 March 2024 the respondent body corporate, acting through its trustees, disconnected the electricity supply to the unit because levies were allegedly in arrears. The applicant stated that a trustee had taken the key to the meter box and that requests on 3 March 2024 for restoration of the supply were refused. He approached the Community Schemes Ombud Service on an urgent basis under section 38 of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 (CSOS Act), seeking immediate restoration of electricity. The respondent's only substantive contention was that the applicant was not the owner of the unit, which formed part of a deceased estate, Estate Late Ms Eunice Shingange. The matter was decided on written submissions.
The application succeeded. The adjudicator granted the relief sought under section 39(7)(b) of the CSOS Act, ordered the respondent immediately to restore full electricity supply to unit 05, and directed the respondent not to terminate the electricity supply to the applicant's unit in future unless and until it has obtained a court order authorising that step. No order as to costs was made.
A body corporate is not empowered by the sectional titles or community schemes framework to disconnect electricity to a unit as a means of enforcing payment of levies without first obtaining a court order. An occupier materially affected by such disconnection has standing under section 38 of the CSOS Act to seek urgent restorative relief, and the adjudicator may order restoration under section 39(7)(b). Any scheme rule purporting to authorise disconnection without judicial approval is invalid.
The adjudicator observed that if the respondent relied on registered body corporate rules to justify the disconnection, those rules would be unconstitutional and invalid, and the body corporate should amend them in terms of section 10(5)(a) of the STSMA. The order also noted the general financial strain caused by levy non-payment on community schemes, but stated that this does not justify unlawful self-help.
The decision reinforces, within the CSOS/community schemes context, the South African anti-spoliation principle that a body corporate may not resort to self-help by disconnecting essential services to enforce levy obligations. It is important because it confirms that occupiers, not only owners, may obtain urgent relief under the CSOS Act when materially affected by unlawful conduct in a community scheme. It also underscores that body corporate rules cannot validly authorise unlawful disconnection of electricity without judicial sanction.