The applicant, Ronnie Pillay, is an owner and occupier of a unit in Stoneridge Country Estate Homeowners Association. On 1 March 2024 he received a WhatsApp message from the estate manager stating that owners whose levy accounts were in arrears by more than R40 000 would be 'hard locked' from 13h30 that day. His access tags were deactivated, which meant that he and his family could no longer enter the estate by vehicle in the ordinary manner and had to park outside and use pedestrian access. Pillay stated that he had been experiencing financial difficulties, that he had lived on the property for 20 years, and that the property was in the process of being sold. He said he attempted to make payment arrangements with the HOA, including offers to pay substantial upfront amounts and the balance in instalments, but these were not accepted. The respondent HOA explained that it faced substantial levy arrears across the estate, had implemented debt-collection measures pursuant to resolutions and notices to residents, and had previously concluded an acknowledgment of debt with the applicant which he failed to honour. The applicant sought restoration of full access and an order compelling the HOA to accept his proposed payment arrangement.
Application upheld in part. The respondent was ordered to restore full access facilities to the applicant and his family, including reinstating access tags to the front motorised gate, within 5 hours of receipt of the adjudication order; to refrain from imposing downgraded access control systems on the applicant or occupants of his unit unless authorised by a court order; the applicant's request that the respondent be compelled to accept his proposed payment arrangement was dismissed; and there was no order as to costs.
A community scheme, including a homeowners association, may not lawfully disconnect, limit or downgrade an owner's or occupier's access to the scheme as a mechanism to enforce payment of arrear levies. Any such interference with possession, use or enjoyment of property constitutes unlawful self-help and is contrary to the principles underlying the mandament van spolie. This remains so irrespective of the amount of arrears or any purported authorisation in the scheme's constitutional documents. In addition, a CSOS adjudicator may grant competent relief restoring access, but lacks power under section 39 of the CSOS Act to compel a respondent to accept a specific proposed payment arrangement where the statute does not authorise that order.
The adjudicator observed that there are numerous CSOS adjudication orders supporting the principle that denial of access for levy arrears is unlawful. The adjudicator also commented that whether an HOA's memorandum of incorporation or articles of association purport to allow denial of access is irrelevant because a person cannot agree to the suspension or waiver of common-law rights. These remarks supported the outcome but were broader explanatory observations beyond the strictly necessary holding.
The decision is significant in South African community schemes jurisprudence because it reaffirms that homeowners associations and similar bodies may not use denial of physical access or downgraded access controls as a means of enforcing payment of arrear levies. It confirms that such measures amount to unlawful self-help and potentially spoliation, and that community schemes must pursue arrear levies through lawful debt-collection or court processes rather than coercive access restrictions. It also clarifies the limits of CSOS adjudicative power, namely that an adjudicator cannot compel a scheme to conclude or accept a particular repayment arrangement where the CSOS Act does not authorise such relief.