The applicant, Casa Grande Body Corporate, is the body corporate of a sectional title/community scheme. The respondent, W Parboo, is the registered owner of Unit 17 at Casa Grande in Lennoxton, Newcastle, KwaZulu-Natal. The body corporate alleged that the respondent had failed to pay levies and related charges since October 2020 and was indebted to it in the amount of R40 572.92 for arrear levies. The applicant submitted levy statements, monthly account statements, and said that notices of levy increases, monthly statements, and AGM minutes had been sent to the respondent over the years. It further stated that a letter of demand had been sent in 2022 but was ignored, and that the respondent had made verbal promises to pay but failed to do so. The respondent did not personally file substantive opposition; instead, his spouse, FG Parboo, filed a sworn affidavit explaining that he had been unemployed since 2018, had no active income, was incarcerated at Newcastle prison, and was therefore unable to depose to an affidavit. No substantive defence to liability for the levies was raised.
The application was upheld. The respondent was declared indebted to the applicant in the amount of R40 572.92 in respect of arrear levies. He was ordered to pay R5 000.00 monthly from the end of September 2023 until the debt was settled in full. No interest would accrue during that payment period, and the amount included the respondent's monthly levy. If the respondent defaulted on any instalment, the full outstanding balance would immediately become due and payable, together with applicable interest from the date the full balance became due. No order as to costs was made.
An owner in a sectional title scheme, as a member of the body corporate by operation of the Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act, is legally obliged to pay levies validly raised by the body corporate when they become due. Where the body corporate proves the arrears on a balance of probabilities, the debt is recoverable through a CSOS adjudication order. Personal circumstances such as unemployment or incarceration do not extinguish or suspend that liability, although they may justify a structured payment arrangement.
The adjudicator observed that in levy matters it is common to order payment within a matter of weeks so as not to prejudice the body corporate, but that the respondent's incarceration justified additional time in the interests of justice and fairness. The comments describing non-payment as a violation of the 'quasi-contractual relationship' between member and scheme, and the equitable decision to suspend interest during the instalment period, were ancillary to the main finding of liability.
The matter reinforces a core principle of South African sectional title and community schemes law: a unit owner's obligation to contribute levies is mandatory and is not excused by personal financial hardship or incarceration. It also illustrates the CSOS adjudication process under the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act and shows that while adjudicators may enforce levy debts strictly, they may tailor payment arrangements on equitable grounds. The case is significant as a practical example of levy enforcement within community schemes and the limited scope of personal circumstances as a defence to liability.