The applicant, Jonathan Swanepoel, is the owner of unit D100 in the Labella Complex in Gordon's Bay, Western Cape. The first respondent is the Labella Complex Body Corporate, represented by its trustees, and the second respondent is Residentia Trust, the managing agent. The dispute arose after the applicant was asked in April 2023 to remove a filing cabinet from his balcony, where it had stood since 2019 and was used when braaiing. He was told that only outdoor furniture was allowed and later that the cabinet was aesthetically displeasing. On 2 April 2023, the applicant moved the cabinet to another position behind a wooden trellis on the balcony, from where he said it was no longer visible from outside the section. On 13 April 2023, he received a warning letter alleging a contravention of Conduct Rule 5, which prohibits placing anything on balconies or other parts visible from outside the section that, in the trustees' discretion, is aesthetically displeasing or undesirable. In May 2023, the body corporate imposed a R500 fine and debited an additional administration fee of R224.25 to the applicant's levy statement. The respondents contended that they were enforcing the scheme rules under the STSMA and that the applicant had initially refused to comply, though they later indicated willingness to waive the penalty while retaining the administration fee. The applicant approached CSOS under section 39(1)(c) seeking relief against unreasonable contributions or charges.
The application was granted. The second respondent was ordered, within five days of receipt of the order, to remove from the applicant's levy statement the R500 fine and the R224.25 administration fee. No order as to costs was made.
A body corporate's decision to impose a fine or related charge for an alleged rule contravention must be objectively reasonable and grounded in the scheme's rules as properly applied to the facts. Where the complained-of item is not shown, on the evidence, to be aesthetically displeasing or undesirable when viewed from outside the section, a fine based on that alleged contravention is not justified. Further, under PMR 25(5), a member's levy account may not be debited with an administration fee unless it is a contribution or charge lawfully levied under the Act or rules, or unless the member has consented or there is authority in a judgment or order by a judge, adjudicator or arbitrator.
The adjudicator observed that other forms of relief mentioned by the applicant were not relevant to the dispute, although relief under section 39(4)(e) might have been appropriate in the circumstances. The adjudicator also made general remarks that CSOS is a creature of statute whose powers are confined to section 39, and that cost orders are generally not made in section 54 determinations unless the matter falls within section 53 grounds such as frivolousness or vexatiousness.
This decision is significant in South African community schemes law because it affirms that trustees' enforcement of conduct rules and related financial penalties must satisfy an objective standard of reasonableness and must remain within the authority conferred by the scheme rules and applicable legislation. It also reinforces PMR 25(5) by making clear that a body corporate may not simply debit an owner's account with an administration fee unless it is a valid contribution or charge under the Act or rules, or is authorised by consent or formal adjudicative order. The case illustrates CSOS's supervisory role in reviewing unreasonable or unlawfully imposed charges in sectional title governance.