The applicant, Clivia Gardens Body Corporate, is the body corporate of a sectional title scheme. The respondent, Zamani Minenhle Mkhize, is the registered owner of Unit 104 in the scheme and therefore a member of the body corporate. The body corporate alleged that the respondent had failed to pay levies and related ancillary charges. Although the application initially referred to a larger amount, the latest levy statement provided to the adjudicator showed that as at 24 May 2024 the respondent owed R1 869.13. The applicant also sought further relief, including attachment of rental income, attachment and execution against the respondent's immovable property, and relief under section 39(5)(a) of the CSOS Act. The respondent did not file any response to the section 43 notice or to the request for final written submissions.
The application succeeded in part. The adjudicator granted relief under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act and declared that the respondent owed the applicant R1 869.13 in levies and ancillary charges as at 24 May 2024. The respondent was ordered to pay the amount in instalments of R934.57 commencing on 1 July 2024, with the balance payable on the first day of the succeeding month. The order did not affect ongoing monthly levies and ancillary charges. No interest would accrue on the outstanding amount during the instalment period, but on default the full amount would become immediately due and payable. Relief for attachment and execution against the immovable property was refused, relief under section 39(5)(a) was refused, and there was no order as to costs.
A registered owner in a sectional title scheme is obliged to pay validly levied contributions and authorised ancillary charges to the body corporate. Where the body corporate proves, on a balance of probabilities, the existence and amount of arrear levies by means of a levy statement and supporting resolutions, an adjudicator may grant relief under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act for payment of the amount due. Relief under section 39(1)(f) is not competent unless the tenant to whom the order is to apply is specified. Section 39(5)(a) is confined to orders compelling a managing agent to comply with its contract or applicable code of conduct and does not extend to unrelated debt-enforcement relief.
The adjudicator observed that owners who default on levy payments are effectively subsidised by other members of the body corporate who pay conscientiously, and that a body corporate cannot perform its statutory functions and duties without funds from unit owners. These remarks explain the practical importance of levy enforcement but were not independently necessary to the dispositive order.
The decision is significant in community schemes and sectional title governance because it confirms that a body corporate may use the CSOS adjudication process to recover arrear levies and ancillary charges from an owner on proof of indebtedness. It also illustrates the limits of CSOS relief: rental-attachment relief under section 39(1)(f) requires proper identification of the tenant, and section 39(5)(a) cannot be used outside its proper management-services context. The matter reinforces the principle that levy obligations are essential to the functioning of a body corporate and that defaulting owners undermine the scheme's financial sustainability.