The applicant, Paul Stewart Craig, is the registered owner of Unit 12 in the Nelspruit Bateleur Adult Lifestyle Estate. He brought an application under section 38 read with section 39(1)(c) of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011, contending that the estate's levy structures for FY2023 and FY2024 were unreasonable and discriminatory. Historically, the estate had used a simpler levy system based broadly on small stands, large stands, and consolidated/double stands. The applicant alleged that from FY2023 onward the respondent HOA introduced additional stand-size classes and breakpoint increments that were inconsistent, unjustified, and discriminatory against certain categories of owners, particularly around the 1100m² breakpoint. He maintained that only mowing costs were linked to stand size and that other services were enjoyed equally by all homeowners, so levies should have been structured more consistently. He also proposed a linear levy model, which the HOA rejected. The respondent HOA answered that the levy structure changes were necessitated by the development and expansion of the estate, including new stand sizes, and were implemented gradually under a three-year plan. It relied on clause 5.5 of its Memorandum of Incorporation (MOI), which authorises directors to determine contributions with reference to proportional property size and to group properties into classes. The respondent also stated that the applicant had previously challenged similar levy increases in an earlier CSOS matter and remained in arrears notwithstanding prior processes.
The application was dismissed. The adjudicator ordered that the relief sought by the applicant in relation to prayer (a) is refused. No order as to costs was made.
Where an HOA's MOI validly empowers directors to determine contributions with reference to property size and to classify properties into different levy categories, and that empowering provision is not itself impugned, a member who purchased into the scheme is contractually bound by that levy regime. A levy structure differentiated in accordance with such an MOI provision is not, without more, unreasonable under section 39(1)(c) of the CSOS Act merely because it is unequal across members. Further, a party may not relitigate substantially the same levy dispute between the same parties once it has already been finally determined; the doctrine of res judicata bars the repeated challenge.
The adjudicator observed generally that relevant evidence must be assessed on a balance of probabilities and that only relevant evidence should be considered. The decision also repeated general propositions from authority that disregard of governance instruments in community schemes may lead to chaos, and that directors bear fiduciary responsibilities under the Companies Act and the MOI. There were no substantial independent obiter remarks beyond these general observations.
The decision underscores that in South African community schemes and homeowners' associations, members are generally bound by the contractual framework of the scheme's constitution or MOI, including levy-allocation provisions, unless those provisions themselves are challenged successfully. It also illustrates the role of section 39(1)(c) of the CSOS Act in levy disputes and confirms that CSOS adjudication will not lightly interfere with a levy structure authorised by the governing instruments of the association. In addition, the matter highlights the application of res judicata in CSOS proceedings to prevent repeated challenges to substantially the same levy dispute.