The applicant, Andresha Balram, is the registered owner of Unit 001 in Pebble Park 2, a sectional title scheme. She complained about leaking gutters at her unit and obtained a service provider's report recommending the replacement of two leaking gutter corners and the installation of two additional downpipes to improve roof-water drainage. She contended that the gutters were attached to the roof, which she said formed part of the common property, and that the body corporate was therefore responsible for maintaining and repairing them. She also relied on the scheme's 10-year maintenance plan, which she said included gutters, to argue that the body corporate should bear the cost. The applicant sought an order compelling the respondent body corporate to approve the installation of the additional downpipes and to reimburse her R2,850.00 for repairs she had already paid for to replace two leaking gutter corners and seal others. The respondent opposed the application, stating that the applicant had undertaken the repairs without any agreement or approval from the body corporate, that the relevant fittings were within her exclusive use area, and that under the registered exclusive use conditions all fittings and structures in that area had to be maintained by the owner. The respondent further said the 10-year maintenance plan did not oblige it to fund gutter repairs or replacement, but only made provision for repainting of installations, and that it was still investigating the gutter issue scheme-wide when the applicant proceeded with the works.
The application was dismissed in terms of section 53(1)(a) of the CSOS Act. The adjudicator ordered that: (a) the relief sought by the applicant in terms of sections 39(6)(a) and 39(1)(e) was misconceived; (b) the relief sought against the respondent was dismissed; and (c) there was no order as to costs.
A CSOS adjudicator may grant only those remedies that fall within the substantive categories in section 39 of the CSOS Act. A claim by an owner for reimbursement of expenses already incurred for repairs is not competent where, in substance, it falls outside the statutory remedies and resembles a damages or delictual compensation claim. Further, where the body corporate has instituted a process to investigate and determine maintenance requirements affecting scheme property, an owner is not entitled on the presented facts to compel approval of specific gutter works under section 39(6)(a), and relief of that kind may properly be refused as misconceived.
The adjudicator made general observations about the statutory duties of a body corporate under the STSMA to maintain common property and to establish administrative and reserve funds for repair and future maintenance. The adjudicator also gave illustrative examples of common property and noted generally that an owner's maintenance obligations are largely confined to his or her section. These remarks provided context to the dispute but were not the decisive basis for the final dismissal, which ultimately turned on the prematurity/misconceived nature of the maintenance relief and the lack of power to grant the reimbursement sought.
The decision is significant for community schemes jurisprudence because it underscores the limits of CSOS adjudicative power under section 39 of the CSOS Act. It confirms that not every dispute involving maintenance expenditure can be converted into a CSOS financial claim, especially where the substance of the relief resembles a damages or reimbursement claim outside the statutory remedies. The order also illustrates that where a body corporate is engaged in a broader investigation or scheme-wide maintenance process, an owner may not necessarily compel immediate approval of specific works through CSOS. The adjudication reflects the developing approach, consistent with Western Cape High Court authority, that CSOS is a specialist forum with limited statutory remedial competence rather than a general forum for private-law damages claims.