The applicant, Joan Zizipho Ndude, is the registered owner of unit 29 in the Eagles Grove sectional title scheme in Honeydew, Gauteng. She brought an urgent application to the Community Schemes Ombud Service (CSOS) seeking an order compelling the respondent body corporate to restore electricity supply to her section. Her complaint was that the body corporate had appointed a metering company (referred to in parts of the order as Alpha Metering and in other parts as Impact Meter Readers/Impact Meter Services) without proper notice to owners, and that owners were later required to sign terms and conditions and pay a R1 000 deposit, failing which their electricity would be disconnected. She alleged these requirements had not been disclosed at the AGM and that her electricity was cut off on 11 December 2023 after she refused to sign the agreement and pay the deposit. She also stated that she had withheld payment for November and December pending answers to her concerns. The respondent did not file submissions in this particular matter, but the adjudicator relied on the respondent's submissions in a parallel application by another owner involving identical facts. Those submissions stated that notice of the AGM and the proposed appointment of the metering company had been circulated, that the AGM was validly reconvened for lack of quorum, and that owners present voted overwhelmingly in favour of appointing the metering company. The respondent also stated that the metering company, as a registered electricity reseller/on-seller, billed occupiers directly and had authority to disconnect services for non-payment or absence of a supply agreement. It further alleged that the applicant's account was heavily in arrears.
The application was dismissed in terms of section 53(1)(a) of the CSOS Act as misconceived and without substance. No order as to costs was made.
Where a sectional title body corporate validly appoints a registered electricity reseller/on-seller through a duly approved member resolution, and the reseller thereafter contracts directly with unit owners or occupiers for utility supply, the body corporate is not the party responsible for disconnection effected by that reseller. In such circumstances, an applicant seeking restoration of electricity from the body corporate must prove that the body corporate itself acted unlawfully or remained legally responsible for the disconnection; failing that, the claim falls to be dismissed. The adjudicator also accepted that majority approval at a properly reconvened AGM binds dissenting owners in the governance of the scheme.
The adjudicator observed that the applicant should appreciate that a body corporate is a democratic organisation in which the majority vote prevails. The adjudicator also remarked that the applicant would have no alternative but to pay her arrear service account, pay the required deposit, and conclude an agreement with the metering company in order to receive supply. In addition, the order contains explanatory comments about the general operation of electricity resellers, their ERASA membership, and the permissibility of resale under municipal by-laws, the Electricity Act, and the NERSA framework. A limitation in the text is that the metering company is referred to inconsistently as Alpha Metering and Impact Meter Readers/Impact Meter Services, and no formal law report citation is available because this is a CSOS adjudication order rather than a reported court judgment.
The decision is significant in the community schemes context because it affirms that a body corporate may, pursuant to a valid member resolution, appoint an external utility management company or electricity reseller to supply and administer electricity to units. It also illustrates that where the reseller, rather than the body corporate, is the contracting supplier and disconnecting party, relief directed against the body corporate may fail. The order underscores the importance of majority decision-making in sectional title governance and recognises the legal permissibility of electricity resale arrangements under municipal by-laws and the wider regulatory framework.