Amanda Gumede, the registered owner of a unit in the respondent body corporate's sectional title scheme, challenged charges debited to her levy account relating to a special levy/loan raised to fund structural repairs to the building. The scheme had passed a resolution at a special general meeting on 30 April 2019, by 94% of members present, to obtain a loan to remedy serious structural defects after insurance cover and the certificate of occupancy were cancelled. Owners unable to pay the special levy in a lump sum would repay their allocated portions of the loan with interest according to participation quota. Gumede later entered into an acknowledgment of debt/payment arrangement with the scheme's then managing agent, Mansfield Property Solutions, under which she paid R70,000 and the balance of approximately R46,769.07 would be waived subject to compliance with future monthly payments. When a new managing agent, Misty Lake, took over, it rejected that arrangement as unauthorised, reworked her account, reinstated loan interest, and claimed further amounts were due. Gumede approached CSOS seeking removal of the special levy, interest and related charges, and reconciliation of her account.
The application succeeded only in a limited respect. The adjudicator declared the acknowledgment of debt invalid and confirmed the lawfulness of the respondent's reconciliation of the levy account. The applicant's claims to remove the special levy, interest, and other charges were refused, except that debt collection fees of R1,094.76 were disallowed. The amount due by the applicant to the respondent was confirmed at R42,275.99 less R1,094.76, leaving R41,181.23 payable. No order as to costs was made.
A managing agent or trustees may not validly conclude a compromise that reduces an owner's levy or special-loan liability determined by a valid general meeting resolution where the effect is to shift the unpaid burden to other members, unless such compromise is properly authorised in accordance with the STSMA, PMR 9(b), section 7(1), and the relevant members' resolution. An unauthorised acknowledgment of debt of that nature is invalid and may lawfully be set aside, after which the body corporate may reconcile the account and levy the approved interest. In addition, a body corporate may not debit a member's account with debt collection charges absent consent or lawful authority, and such charges are impermissible without proper compliance with statutory requirements.
The adjudicator observed that the applicant could not reasonably have known whether Mansfield had authority when it assured her that the trustees had approved the arrangement. The adjudicator also took judicial notice of the applicant's apparent financial difficulty and urged her to approach the respondent to negotiate a feasible payment arrangement for the loan and ongoing levies. The statement that the adjudicator 'find[s] for the applicant, but not as claimed in the application' was not reflected in the substantive order and appears to be a non-determinative formulation rather than the true dispositive outcome.
The decision is significant for community schemes and sectional title governance because it affirms that trustees and managing agents cannot privately compromise or reduce an owner's levy or loan liability where that liability has been fixed by a valid members' resolution. Any such compromise that prejudices other owners or alters the participation quota burden requires proper authority consistent with the STSMA and prescribed management rules. The matter also confirms that CSOS adjudicators may scrutinise ancillary charges such as debt collection fees and disallow them where there is no lawful basis or proof of compliance with statutory requirements.