The applicant, Johann van der Merwe, is the registered owner of Unit 71 in Riverside Park, a sectional title/community scheme. He lodged a dispute under section 38 of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 (CSOS Act) against the trustees of the Riverside Park Body Corporate. His complaints concerned the trustees' alleged misapplication of scheme rules relating to common property and exclusive use areas, including paving and other improvements on common property, alleged allocation of part of a servitude/common property to Unit 73, failure to include his proposed agenda items for a special general meeting, non-enforcement of parking rules, and an allegedly antagonistic attitude by the chairperson and managing agent. Despite these factual complaints, the actual relief he sought in prayer (a) was an 'official (and, therefore, legal) opinion' from CSOS on the interpretation of the rules, and if found correct, a public apology and clarification to the body corporate. The matter proceeded on the papers after conciliation failed and a certificate of non-resolution was issued.
The relief sought by the applicant in prayer (a) was refused. No order as to costs was made.
A CSOS adjudicator may grant or refuse only relief that falls within section 39 of the CSOS Act. Where an applicant seeks merely an advisory or legal opinion on the interpretation of scheme rules, rather than competent statutory relief in respect of a live dispute, the adjudicator lacks jurisdiction to entertain that request and must refuse it.
The adjudicator discussed the doctrine of mootness and referred to case law emphasising that adjudicative bodies should avoid deciding abstract, academic or hypothetical questions and should not expend resources on matters producing no tangible result. These observations supported the jurisdictional conclusion but did not finally determine the parties' underlying sectional title complaints on their merits.
The decision is significant for community schemes jurisprudence because it confirms the limited statutory jurisdiction of CSOS adjudicators. CSOS is not a forum for obtaining abstract legal advice or advisory opinions on the interpretation of rules in the absence of competent statutory relief. Applicants must formulate their claims as live disputes seeking one or more of the specific remedies authorised by section 39 of the CSOS Act.