The applicant, Ludovico Pacini, was the owner or purported owner of Unit 7 in the Kalbarri sectional title scheme in Umgeni Park, Durban North. He alleged that his unit suffered storm damage on 11 April 2022. A claim was submitted to the scheme’s insurer by the body corporate, but the insurer rejected the claim on 29 September 2022, citing that the damages were not due to a sudden and unforeseen event and referring also to the absence of signed documentation and repair invoices. Pacini contended that the trustees had failed to submit requested documents timeously, causing the rejection of the claim, and sought an order compelling the body corporate to take action under its insurance policy to recover the amount, alternatively to repair the damage. The respondent did not file formal submissions, but an email from new trustees stated that the claim had since been resubmitted through new managing agents.
The application was dismissed in terms of section 53(1) of the CSOS Act. No order as to costs was made.
CSOS may grant only those remedies expressly contemplated by section 39 of the CSOS Act. Where an owner’s complaint is in substance a challenge to an insurer’s rejection of a claim, rather than a dispute capable of redress through a competent CSOS order, CSOS lacks jurisdiction. An adjudicator cannot compel relief beyond the statutory powers conferred by the Act, and where the proper forum is the Ombudsman for Short-Term Insurance, the CSOS application must fail.
The adjudicator observed that if the Pacini Family Trust, rather than the applicant personally, was the registered owner of the unit, retrospective authority could potentially cure the defect in standing. The adjudicator also noted that, because the new trustees had resubmitted the insurance claim, any attempt to compel repairs by the body corporate was premature. In addition, the discussion of the body corporate’s general statutory duty to insure under the STSMA, and the owner’s ability to obtain separate insurance for uncovered risks, was contextual and not essential to the dismissal based on jurisdiction.
This decision underscores that CSOS adjudicators are confined to the remedies specifically authorized by section 39 of the CSOS Act and cannot determine disputes that properly fall within the jurisdiction of an insurance ombud or other forum. It is significant in community schemes law because it clarifies the limits of CSOS’s jurisdiction in disputes concerning rejected insurance claims and the distinction between a body corporate’s insurance obligations and an insurer’s liability under a policy.