The applicant, Maria Magdalene Carstens, is the owner of unit 62 in the La Belle Vie sectional title scheme in Stellenbosch. She noticed dampness, bubbling and peeling paint, and water intrusion in her unit, which was used as an office. She reported the problem to the managing agent and trustees by telephone and email, and alleged that the body corporate failed to inspect or assist promptly. Because of the urgency and disruption to her business, she engaged a contractor to open the floor, investigate the leak, and carry out repairs, including replacement of the entire tiled floor because matching tiles could not be sourced, and repairs to walls allegedly affected by moisture penetration from the adjacent unit. An insurance claim was later submitted only after the repairs had already been completed and was rejected. The applicant then sought, under s 39(6)(b)(ii) of the CSOS Act, an order compelling the body corporate to reimburse her for the repair costs. The respondent body corporate contended that the leaks were either within the applicant's section or unproven to be from common property, that the applicant delayed in providing information needed for investigation and the insurance claim, that no professional report established the source of the leak, and that owners are responsible for maintaining their own sections under the STSMA.
The application to compel the body corporate to reimburse the applicant for the reasonable costs of repairs in her unit was refused. No order as to costs was made.
A body corporate is responsible under the STSMA for maintenance and repair of common property, while an owner is responsible for maintenance and repair of their own section. Absent proof that a leak or defect originated from common property, liability cannot be attached to the body corporate for repair costs incurred inside an individual owner's unit. Further, claims seeking compensation for consequential damage allegedly caused by delayed action or omission by the body corporate are, in substance, delictual damages claims and are not matters that CSOS adjudicators are empowered to determine under s 39 of the CSOS Act.
The adjudicator observed that consequential damage claims are inherently difficult because internal deterioration may arise from wear and tear, gradual deterioration, or pre-existing conditions, making apportionment of blame difficult. The adjudicator also remarked that allowing reimbursement where an owner undertakes repairs without body corporate involvement or approval could open the system to abuse and result in the body corporate funding what amounts to renovations rather than necessary repairs. The discussion of causation, wrongfulness, fault, legal causation, remoteness, and possible contributory negligence was also largely explanatory and ancillary to the main holding.
This decision is significant in community schemes and sectional titles law because it affirms the distinction between a body corporate's duty to maintain common property and an owner's duty to maintain their own section. It also underscores that CSOS adjudication is not the proper forum for ordinary delictual damages claims by individual owners for consequential loss suffered inside their units. The ruling applies and reinforces the Western Cape High Court's reasoning in Harjevan Prag, signalling that reimbursement claims against a body corporate require clear proof that damage is attributable to common property failure and fall within the limited remedial framework of the CSOS Act.