The applicant, Diane Sole, is the registered owner of unit 15 in Ithaca Mansions, Sea Point, Cape Town. She alleged that rainwater penetrated through the roof of her unit, causing damage that required urgent waterproofing repairs. She informed the respondent body corporate and its managing agents, arranged for a contractor to inspect, and paid an initial amount to commence the work. She contended that the managing agent requested proof of payment so that a refund could be facilitated, and that no objection was raised until after she had paid and the work was scheduled, when she was told that repairs to common property required prior trustee approval. She ultimately incurred R27,450.00 and sought repayment of the full amount from the body corporate. The respondent accepted that external repairs to common property were the body corporate's responsibility, but stated that the applicant had no authority to appoint a contractor for non-emergency work on common property without trustee approval. It alleged that she had been told not to proceed because the trustees were obtaining quotations, but she ignored that instruction. After obtaining quotations, the trustees selected a quote of R6,900.00 and were willing to reimburse only that amount, not the applicant's full expenditure.
The application was dismissed. The adjudicator ordered that the relief sought in terms of section 39(1)(e) of the CSOS Act was misconceived and accordingly dismissed under section 53(1)(a) of the CSOS Act. No order as to costs was made.
A CSOS adjudicator may only grant relief that falls within the categories expressly contemplated in section 39 of the CSOS Act. Where an applicant seeks repayment or compensation that is, in substance, a delictual or damages-type claim arising from disputed responsibility for repairs to common property, such relief is outside the adjudicator's jurisdiction. If the relief sought does not fit within section 39, the application must be dismissed as misconceived.
The adjudicator referred, with approval, to High Court observations in Prag that the CSOS Act was intended to address governance/regulatory matters and behavioural disputes within community schemes, not complex delictual damages claims involving wrongfulness, fault, causation, and quantification. The decision also noted that allowing such claims under section 39 could subvert ordinary delictual principles. These remarks were supportive of the jurisdictional conclusion rather than independent findings on the substantive merits of the applicant's claim.
This determination is significant because it reinforces the limits of CSOS adjudicative jurisdiction. It confirms that not every monetary dispute involving a body corporate qualifies as a 'financial issue' under section 39. Claims that are in substance for damages, compensation, or reimbursement for alleged loss caused by conduct relating to common property may fall outside CSOS's statutory powers and must instead be pursued in a court of competent jurisdiction. The order aligns CSOS adjudication with Western Cape High Court authority on the proper interpretation of section 39 of the CSOS Act.