The applicant, Retsilisetsoe Taole, is the registered owner of Units 259, 611 and 412 in the Colorado sectional title scheme in Rynfield, Benoni, Gauteng. The respondent is the Colorado Body Corporate, represented by its managing agent, Status Mark Property Group trading as Affluence. The dispute concerned levy and related charges on Units 611 and 412. The applicant alleged that the respondent and/or its managing agents had improperly billed his accounts, including a disputed amount of about R32,240/R32,400 on Unit 611, unexplained legal fees of R100, penalties, and an extra R200 on Unit 412. He contended that historical charges were wrongly carried over because his account had not been properly separated from that of a previous owner, Ms EL Bell, when he bought Unit 611 in January 2020. He also alleged that the previous managing agent, Huurkor, incorrectly included utility charges in his levy account despite utilities being paid separately, and that Huurkor later credited some of these amounts. The applicant said he had repeatedly tried to resolve the matter from October 2021, including a meeting with Antoinette Botha of Affluence in January 2023, where the error was allegedly acknowledged. The respondent filed no substantive submissions on the merits, and did not comply with the adjudicator's request under s 51 for a breakdown and supporting documents explaining the brought-forward arrears. On the papers ultimately before the adjudicator, reconciled statements showed both Unit 611 and Unit 412 had credit balances of about R577,50 each.
Application granted in part. The adjudicator found for the applicant, but not as claimed. The respondent was ordered to reconcile the applicant's levy accounts in line with the reconciled statements and credit Unit 611 with R557,50 and Unit 412 with R557,50 (although the body of the reasoning refers to R577,50, the formal order records R557,50). The claims for relief relating to adverse credit-rating action, rectification of credit prejudice, and an unconditional apology were refused. No order as to costs was made.
Under the CSOS Act, an owner who proves on a balance of probabilities that levy contributions or charges were incorrectly determined or unjustifiably carried over is entitled to relief adjusting or reconciling the account under s 39. Where a body corporate or managing agent cannot substantiate alleged arrears, interest, penalties or charges with proper documentary support, those amounts cannot be treated as validly or lawfully owing. A CSOS adjudicator's remedial competence is limited to the orders authorised by s 39 of the CSOS Act; relief outside that statutory framework cannot be granted.
The adjudicator made broader observations that CSOS adjudicators are creatures of statute and may grant only relief specifically authorised by the Act, citing Turley Manor v Jeseelan Pillay & Others and Trustees for the Time Being of the Avenue Body Corporate v Shmaryahu & Another. The order also noted that the relief granted does not affect the applicant's ongoing obligation to pay regular monthly levies and ancillary charges in the ordinary course. There is also an apparent inconsistency in the judgment between the reasoning, which refers to credit balances of R577,50, and the formal order, which records R557,50; the order would ordinarily prevail, but the judgment does not explain the discrepancy.
The decision is significant within community schemes adjudication because it illustrates that a body corporate or managing agent must be able to justify levy arrears, penalties and ancillary charges with proper records. Where historical balances are unexplained and the respondent fails to comply with a s 51 request for supporting documentation, an applicant may succeed in obtaining correction of levy accounts. The ruling also reaffirms an important CSOS principle in South African law: adjudicators are confined to the remedies expressly provided in s 39 of the CSOS Act and cannot grant broader relief such as reputational remedies, apology orders, or orders concerning credit bureau consequences unless clearly authorised by the statute.