The applicant, Pecanwood Estate Homeowners Association, is a homeowners' association and community scheme under the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011. The respondent, Fantique Trade 726 CC, is the owner of 36 Woodlands Avenue within the Pecanwood estate and, by virtue of ownership, a member of the association. The HOA brought a CSOS application under section 39(1)(e) seeking payment of arrear levies, alleging that the respondent's account was more than 120 days in arrears in the amount of R26 440.66. The respondent did not initially respond to the application, and the matter was referred directly to adjudication. Before adjudication, the respondent submitted proof of payment of R20 000 on 1 December 2023. The remaining dispute concerned liability for the unpaid balance of the arrear levies.
The relief sought was granted. The respondent was declared liable to the applicant for arrear levies in the amount of R6 440.66 and ordered to pay that sum on or before 28 February 2024. No order as to costs was made.
A property owner within a homeowners' association becomes bound by the association's memorandum of incorporation and rules by virtue of ownership and membership, and is liable for levies lawfully imposed under those instruments. Where the association proves arrear levies on a balance of probabilities, and any part-payment still leaves a balance outstanding, CSOS may grant an order under section 39(1)(e) compelling payment of the remaining debt.
The adjudicator made broader remarks about the importance of strict adherence to levy obligations in HOAs because levies fund essential estate expenses such as security, waste management, insurance, rates, taxes and administration. These observations provide context for the need to enforce levy obligations but were not independently necessary to decide the precise amount owing in this case.
The matter reaffirms, in the CSOS context, that owners in homeowners' associations are contractually bound by the association's constitutive documents and are obliged to pay levies raised in terms of those documents. It also illustrates CSOS's role in enforcing levy debts as financial disputes under section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act, including where partial payment reduces but does not extinguish the debt.