The applicant, Trulansa Court Body Corporate, is the body corporate of a residential sectional title scheme situated in Elsburg, Johannesburg. The respondent, Nkosiyomuzi Dube, is the registered owner of unit 27 in the scheme and therefore a member of the body corporate. The body corporate alleged that the respondent had failed over a period of time to pay levy contributions due in respect of his unit. According to the applicant’s October 2023 statement, the arrear amount totalled R44 843.78, inclusive of interest calculated at 18% per annum. The applicant stated that demands had been made, internal remedies had been exhausted, and the trustees had resolved to pursue recovery through the Community Schemes Ombud Service (CSOS). The respondent did not file a substantive response or raise any valid defence despite being given an opportunity to do so. After conciliation failed and a certificate of non-resolution was issued on 30 November 2023, the matter was referred to adjudication on the papers.
The application was granted. The respondent was ordered to pay arrear levy contributions to the applicant in the amount of R44 843.78 in full on or before 31 May 2024. No order as to costs was made.
A body corporate may obtain relief under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act for payment of arrear levy contributions where it proves, on a balance of probabilities, that levies were duly raised and remain unpaid by a unit owner. In the absence of a valid defence or factual dispute from the owner, documentary proof of the levy account and supporting breakdown is sufficient to justify an order for payment. Interest may be charged on overdue amounts where authorised by the applicable management rules and trustee resolution.
The adjudicator observed that levies are the lifeblood of shared living schemes and that failure by members to pay can destabilise a scheme and prejudice the collective interests and investments of all owners. The adjudicator also commented generally on costs under the CSOS framework, noting that parties are usually expected to bear their own costs and that adverse costs orders are more commonly associated with frivolous, vexatious or non-compliant applications under section 53. No fuller official law report citation was available because the text provided is a CSOS adjudication order rather than a reported court judgment.
This decision reinforces the principle in South African community schemes law that owners in sectional title schemes are obliged to pay levies duly raised by the body corporate, and that CSOS provides an effective statutory forum for recovery of arrear contributions under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act. It also underscores that non-payment of levies threatens the financial stability of schemes and that uncontroverted documentary proof of arrears will ordinarily justify relief. The decision is practically significant for bodies corporate seeking recovery of levies without resorting immediately to ordinary civil litigation.