The applicant, Barzani 53 CC, was the registered owner of multiple units in the Whitfield Ridge sectional title scheme in Boksburg, namely units 44, 100, 103, 109, 115, 121, 122, 123, 134, 135, 140, 141, 144, 150, 152, 153, 154, 155, 158, 160, 178, 180, 193, 194 and 195. The respondent body corporate, or its managing agent acting on its instructions, caused the prepaid electricity meters for those units to be blocked, with the result that the applicant’s tenants could not purchase or load electricity and were unable to use electricity in the units. The applicant contended that this was an unlawful act of spoliation. The CSOS notified the respondent of the complaint and referred to authority stating that disconnecting electricity without a court order is unlawful, and gave the respondent an opportunity to restore supply. The respondent did not file substantive submissions, despite its managing agent indicating that the papers had been forwarded to the relevant persons. The matter was then referred directly to adjudication on an urgent basis. The applicant also sought compensation for occupants for any claims arising from the respondent’s conduct, but had to prove ownership of the listed units, which it did by producing a Deeds Office report.
The applicant’s first prayer was granted and the second prayer dismissed. The respondent was ordered to reconnect forthwith, by no later than 4 p.m. on 10 August 2023, the electricity supply to all the listed units and to reinstate unimpeded access to the prepaid electricity meters, including unblocking them so electricity could be purchased and used. The respondent was further ordered not to load anything other than electricity on the meters, to bear all costs of reconnection, and to refrain in future from terminating electricity supply or placing any block or hold on the prepaid meters for those units unless and until it obtained a court order authorising such conduct. The applicant’s claim for compensation for occupants was dismissed for lack of competence under section 39 of the CSOS Act. No order as to costs was made.
A body corporate’s blocking of a unit owner’s prepaid electricity meter, thereby preventing the purchase and use of electricity, constitutes unlawful interference with quasi-possession analogous to disconnection of electricity supply and is remediable by spoliation-type relief. Such interference may not lawfully be undertaken as self-help to enforce alleged levy arrears unless authorised by a court order. Under section 39(7)(b) of the CSOS Act, an adjudicator may order restoration of electricity supply and prohibit future unlawful interference, but may not award compensation where section 39 does not provide for that relief.
The adjudicator observed that the Ombud’s Office has an obligation to uphold the law of the Republic and suggested that failure to do so would be unconstitutional and even criminal, but this was not necessary to the dispositive order. The adjudicator also presumed that the likely reason for the respondent’s conduct was levy arrears, though no evidence on that point was before the tribunal and the finding did not depend on it. The discussion of direct referral to adjudication because of urgency under the CSOS Practice Directive was explanatory background rather than part of the core ratio.
The decision is significant in South African community schemes jurisprudence because it reaffirms that a body corporate cannot engage in self-help by disconnecting or blocking electricity supply to enforce levy payment. It confirms that prepaid-meter blocking is legally equivalent to disconnecting electricity and constitutes spoliation. The case also illustrates the scope of relief available under the CSOS Act: restorative and regulatory orders can be granted under section 39(7)(b), but compensatory damages fall outside a CSOS adjudicator’s powers unless expressly authorised by the statute.