The applicant, The Trustees of Cilaos Body Corporate, is the body corporate of a sectional title scheme. The respondent, Kgaugelo Gracious Mehlape, is the registered owner of unit 64 in the scheme. The body corporate alleged that the respondent failed to make full payment of monthly levies and ancillary charges, despite written demands and monthly statements being sent to the respondent's email address. The applicant stated that as at 24 November 2023 the respondent was in arrears in the amount of R8 581.11, comprising unpaid levies, CSOS levies, a debit order fee, community reserve fund levy, and interest. The applicant submitted the respondent's levy statement and AGM minutes/resolutions approving the relevant charges. No submissions were received from the respondent. The applicant sought payment of the arrears and related disbursements, and also asked for authority to terminate utilities and install a prepaid meter should the arrears remain unpaid.
The application succeeded in part. The respondent was declared indebted to the applicant in the amount of R8 581.11 for arrear levies and ancillary charges as at 24 November 2023, and was ordered to pay that amount in five equal monthly instalments of R1 716.22 commencing on 1 April 2024, with the remaining instalments due on the first day of each succeeding month. The order did not affect the respondent's ongoing obligation to pay current monthly levies and ancillary charges. No interest would accrue on the outstanding amount during the six-month payment period, but on default the full amount would become immediately due and payable. The relief seeking termination of utilities and installation of prepaid meters was refused. There was no order as to costs.
A body corporate is entitled, under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act, to an order compelling payment of arrear levies and duly authorised ancillary charges where it proves the indebtedness on a balance of probabilities through scheme records and resolutions. By contrast, relief authorising termination of utilities for non-payment cannot be granted absent proper judicial authority, as such self-help infringes protected possessory/incorporeal rights; and relief authorising installation of prepaid meters requires compliance with Prescribed Management Rule 29 of the STSMA, including the required special resolution and notice procedures.
The adjudicator remarked that owners who default on levy payments are effectively subsidised by compliant owners and that a body corporate cannot perform its statutory functions in the absence of contributions from unit owners. These observations explain the practical impact of levy default but were not themselves necessary to the dispositive order. The discussion extending possessory protection to incorporeal rights such as electricity and water supply, based on the cited High Court authority, was also broader explanatory reasoning supporting refusal of the utility-disconnection relief.
This adjudication is significant in South African community schemes law because it reinforces the enforceability of body corporate levies and ancillary charges through the CSOS dispute-resolution mechanism, while at the same time confirming constitutional and procedural limits on self-help measures by bodies corporate. It illustrates that bodies corporate may obtain payment orders for arrears on documentary proof, but may not unilaterally disconnect utilities or impose prepaid meters without proper legal authority and compliance with the STSMA management rules. The matter is also a practical example of CSOS applying sectional title governance rules alongside constitutional protections in levy-collection disputes.