The applicant, Muhammad Dilshad Hussain Jafri, is the owner of Unit 11 in Benzelia Body Corporate in Glenwood, Durban. After moving into the unit, his apartment was allegedly burgled through a kitchen window accessible from the fire exit stairs. He contended that the body corporate and its managing agents failed to respond adequately to his repeated complaints about building security and refused to engage meaningfully with him. In response to the burglary, he installed burglar bars and an external steel mesh grill at his unit. The respondent maintained that these installations affected or defaced common property and were done without the trustees' written consent, contrary to the scheme rules. The applicant said there had been verbal indications from the chairperson that a permission letter should be submitted, but no formal approval was granted by trustee resolution. After the applicant allegedly failed to remove or regularise the alterations despite written demands, the body corporate arranged for contractors to remove the mesh and sought to recover approximately R8 500/R8 600 from him as the cost of remedial work. The applicant challenged the charge, sought relief relating to the levy or contribution claimed from him, asked that the body corporate be compelled to address security issues on the common property, and requested access to documents such as proof of payment, invoices, or quotations supporting the amount claimed.
The application was partially granted and partially dismissed. Relief sought under sections 39(1)(c) and 39(6)(c) of the CSOS Act was dismissed. Relief under section 39(7)(a) was granted: the respondent was ordered to furnish the applicant, within 14 days of delivery of the order, with proof of payment and invoices or quotations relating to the R8 500 claimed for remedial work in the applicant's unit. No order as to costs was made.
In a sectional title scheme, an owner who installs security devices or alterations affecting common property without the trustees' written consent acts in breach of the STSMA rules. A chairperson acting alone cannot validly authorise such works absent a trustee resolution. Where the body corporate gives written notice to remedy the breach and the owner fails to do so, the body corporate may itself remedy the contravention and recover the reasonable costs from the owner under Management Rule 31(2). Further, an adjudicator under the CSOS Act may grant only relief that falls within section 39; complaints falling outside that statutory scope cannot be entertained. However, where a body corporate seeks to recover costs, it may be ordered under section 39(7)(a) to disclose proof of payment and supporting invoices or quotations to the affected owner.
The adjudicator observed that the body corporate's duty to maintain common property includes shared security features such as fences and gates, but not security installations inside a section. The adjudicator also remarked that, although the applicant may have been frustrated by the body corporate's response to his safety complaints, that frustration did not justify non-compliance with scheme rules. The statement that there was no evidence that the respondent had failed to act in the best interests of the scheme was also ancillary to the main basis of decision.
The decision illustrates the limits of CSOS adjudicative jurisdiction: relief must fit within one of the remedies in section 39 of the CSOS Act. It also confirms an important sectional title principle that owners may not unilaterally install security features affecting common property without proper written trustee approval, even where motivated by genuine safety concerns. The order further underscores that a body corporate may recover reasonable remedial costs after a member fails to comply with a written demand, but must remain transparent by providing supporting invoices or proof of payment when claiming such amounts.