The applicant, the Directors of Six Fountains Homeowners Association, brought a dispute-resolution application under sections 38 and 39(1)(e) of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 seeking payment of R15 000 in fines imposed on the respondents, the co-owners of Unit 679 in the estate. The respondents had requested and obtained permission to hold their son's funeral at their home in the estate, subject to conditions. After the funeral on 6 May 2023, the HOA alleged that complaints were received and imposed fines for noise, loitering, parking in streets, littering, unauthorised attempted access or failure to follow security protocols, obstructing the main gate, and non-compliance with slaughter procedures. The fines were approved by the board and communicated to the respondents. The respondents denied the alleged misconduct, said they had informed neighbours and obtained parking permission, disputed the existence of complaints, stated that they cleaned the area, denied any improper access or obstruction, and said no slaughter took place in the estate because they slaughtered elsewhere and brought the remains to the property. They also produced statements from neighbours contradicting the HOA's allegations. It was common cause that no hearing was held before the fines were imposed and that the respondents were only notified after the decision had already been taken.
The application was refused. The adjudicator declared the fines of R15 000 imposed on the respondents invalid, ordered the applicant to remove the fines from the respondents' levy statement within 7 days of receipt of the order, and made no order as to costs.
A homeowners association may enforce conduct rules and impose penalties on members only where the penalty process is lawful, reasonable, and procedurally fair. Where an owner is fined without prior notice, without an opportunity to make representations, and without compliance with the scheme's own disciplinary procedures and the audi alteram partem principle, the fine is invalid and unenforceable. In addition, a claim to recover such fines must be proved on a balance of probabilities, including proof of the alleged transgressions or nuisance.
The adjudicator made broader observations that black funerals are often large, loud, and culturally significant events that many people tolerate as limited inconvenience; that the Bill of Rights protects freedom of religion and cultural practices including ritual animal slaughter; that a community scheme cannot ban funerals or penalise funerals as such, though it may regulate them by reasonable rules and conditions; and that the applicant's conduct showed a lack of empathy, tolerance for black cultural practices, and neighbourliness. These remarks were not strictly necessary to the procedural-fairness holding.
This decision is important in South African community-schemes jurisprudence because it emphasises that HOAs and similar associations, although exercising contractual powers under their constitutions or MOIs, must still comply with procedural fairness and natural justice before imposing fines. It confirms that immediate fining without notice and an opportunity to be heard is invalid. The ruling also highlights the need to balance estate governance with neighbour law principles and constitutional sensitivity toward cultural and religious funeral practices, especially in the context of black cultural observances.