The applicant, James Pereira, is the owner of Unit 19 in the Zonenzee Body Corporate in Jeffreys Bay. He complained to the managing agent on 15 September 2022 that his roof was leaking at the parapet walls, allegedly causing water damage to three ceilings in his unit. He contended that the trustees wrongly regarded the problem as his own responsibility and that the leak persisted despite interior repairs and renovations undertaken by him, including replacing ceiling boards and cornices. He sought reimbursement for internal damage and an order compelling the body corporate to appoint a waterproofing contractor to repair the roof leak. The respondent trustees stated that, upon receiving notice on 20 September 2022, the caretaker and maintenance person attended to the outside roof area and waterproofed the area between roof tiles and parapet walls. They said they were unable to inspect the interior because access was not provided, and they disputed both the causal connection between the roof area and the internal damage claimed, and the reasonableness of the invoices submitted by the applicant. They also noted that substantial internal renovations were underway in the unit, which in their view cast doubt on the source and extent of the alleged damage.
The applicant's claimed relief was refused. The respondent was nevertheless ordered, within 14 days, to appoint a professional leak detector or contractor to issue a report on the cause and origin of the leaks, and to carry out repairs if the report indicates that the leak emanates from an area for which the respondent is responsible. The person responsible for the property causing the leaks must bear the costs of the report and repairs. No order as to costs was made.
In a CSOS application seeking reimbursement for damage and an order compelling a body corporate to effect repairs, the applicant bears the onus of proving on a balance of probabilities that the defect or leak originates from common property for which the body corporate is legally responsible. Without adequate proof, such as evidence establishing the source and cause of the leak, reimbursement and final repair relief against the body corporate cannot be granted.
The adjudicator observed that the photographs indicated that leaks were ongoing and that their origin had not been established with certainty. The adjudicator expressed the considered opinion that the respondent should establish the cause of the leaks with certainty. The discussion that the applicant ought to have appointed a leak detection specialist, obtained a report, and then sought repairs based on that report was also guidance-oriented and ancillary to the main finding.
The decision illustrates the evidential burden in CSOS repair and maintenance disputes. Even where an owner complains of leaks potentially involving common property, the adjudicator requires proof of the source of the leak before imposing liability for reimbursement or repair. The matter also shows that a body corporate's statutory duty to maintain common property does not automatically translate into liability absent proof that the defect originates from common property. At the same time, the adjudicator may craft practical remedial relief to establish the true cause of the defect.