The applicant, Villa Alba Body Corporate, a sectional title body corporate represented by its managing agent Kibo Property Services, brought an application to the Community Schemes Ombud Service under section 38 of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 for relief under section 39(1)(e). The respondent, N P Mbewu, is the owner of Unit 82 in the Villa Alba scheme. The body corporate alleged that the respondent had failed to pay levies and sought an order for payment of outstanding levies, alternatively relief under section 39(1)(f) if there was a tenant, and payment of debt collection fees. The applicant filed a trustees' resolution dated 7 June 2022 authorising the managing agent to act, and a levy statement dated 11 May 2023 reflecting a balance brought forward of R21 380.43 as at 1 March 2023. The respondent initially filed no substantive response, but later stated in final written submissions that she had made an additional payment of R4 000.00 and had emailed to make a payment arrangement. During adjudication, the adjudicator requested an updated statement and proof of authority to charge interest and debt collection fees. The managing agent responded that it could not obtain the requested documents from the trustees and indicated it would withdraw the case, but no trustee-authorised withdrawal was produced.
The application for relief under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act was refused. The order took effect immediately upon electronic service on the parties, and each party was directed to pay its own costs.
A body corporate may in law recover levied contributions from an owner through CSOS proceedings, but relief under section 39(1)(e) will be refused if the applicant fails to prove, on a balance of probabilities, the actual amount owing and fails to furnish supporting documentation for the claimed quantum, including the basis for interest and debt collection charges. A managing agent may act for a body corporate only within the scope of authority conferred by the trustees.
The adjudicator observed that Management Rule 21(3)(c) permits a body corporate to charge interest on overdue amounts provided the rate does not exceed the maximum rate under the National Credit Act and is compounded monthly in arrears. The adjudicator also remarked that a managing agent cannot withdraw proceedings mero motu without authorisation from the trustees, although this was not the decisive basis for the refusal, which ultimately rested on failure to prove quantum.
This adjudication underscores that while a body corporate has a clear statutory right under the STSMA and CSOS Act to recover levies from owners, it must still prove the quantum of the debt with proper documentary support. It also illustrates the evidential burden in CSOS levy-recovery proceedings, particularly where interest and debt collection charges are claimed. The decision further confirms that a managing agent requires proper authority both to institute proceedings and, if relevant, to withdraw them on behalf of the body corporate.