The applicant is the body corporate of a sectional title scheme known as The Straight, incorporated under s 2(1) of the Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011. The respondent is an owner of a unit in the scheme and, by virtue of ownership, a member of the body corporate. The body corporate alleged that over a period of about 25 months, from February 2021 to March 2023, the respondent failed to pay levies and utility charges due to it. The arrears totalled R107 940.63, including R16 610.68 for electricity consumption. The trustees had passed resolutions authorising the raising and recovery of levies, interest on arrears, legal action for recovery, and, by later special resolutions, recovery of utilities otherwise than strictly according to participation quota. The respondent opposed the application but admitted his indebtedness, explaining that financial hardship following the Covid-19 pandemic had impaired his ability to pay. He proposed a payment arrangement of R8 000 per month and contended that the body corporate was not entitled to disconnect electricity absent a prior agreement, relying on Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Alexander and Joseph v City of Johannesburg. The body corporate, in reply, relied on a tacit agreement said to arise from the sectional title relationship and the respondent’s ownership within the scheme, under which the body corporate paid Eskom and the owner was obliged to reimburse it for actual electricity consumed. The respondent did not appear at the hearing and did not file heads of argument despite an earlier order compelling him to do so.
The application succeeded. The respondent was ordered to pay R107 940.63, together with interest at 11.25% a tempore morae to date of final payment. The applicant was authorised to engage a qualified electrician to disconnect electricity supply to the respondent’s unit if the respondent failed to pay the outstanding electricity charges within 10 days of the order. The electricity supply was to remain disconnected until those electricity charges plus interest at 11.25% per annum compounded monthly were paid. The respondent was also ordered to pay the costs of the application on Scale B. The court further corrected its earlier order under Rule 42 so that continued disconnection was tied only to unpaid electricity charges and interest, not the entire judgment amount.
A body corporate established under the Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act is entitled to recover arrear levies and electricity charges from a unit owner who admits or does not validly dispute the debt. Where the body corporate pleads and establishes a tacit agreement arising from the sectional title relationship under which it pays electricity charges on behalf of owners and owners must reimburse it for actual consumption, a court may authorise disconnection of electricity supply to a defaulting owner’s unit if electricity charges remain unpaid after notice. Such relief is competent as a loss-mitigation measure, particularly where the body corporate seeks judicial authority rather than acting unilaterally. Joseph v City of Johannesburg does not bar such relief where the body corporate has afforded notice and approached the court, because that case concerned the municipality’s public-law duty of procedural fairness to end-users.
The court expressed doubt as to why an agreement between a body corporate and owners to underpin utility disconnection should necessarily fail constitutional scrutiny or be ultra vires, especially when municipalities may disconnect after notice and landlords may stop paying municipal accounts in circumstances leading to disconnection. The court also observed, more broadly, that sectional title schemes were historically intended to broaden ownership opportunities for lower-income households and that allowing bodies corporate to cap losses by disconnecting non-paying owners may protect the scheme as a whole from Eskom disconnection and financial collapse. These observations were not strictly necessary beyond the finding that a tacit agreement existed and justified the relief granted.
The case is significant because it recognises, in the sectional title context, that a body corporate may obtain court-sanctioned relief to disconnect electricity to a defaulting owner where a tacit agreement to reimburse electricity charges is established and properly pleaded. It develops the practical enforcement powers of bodies corporate in relation to utility recovery, distinguishes Joseph v City of Johannesburg as a public-law notice case, and narrows Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Alexander by indicating that disconnection relief may be competent when supported by pleaded agreement and due process. It also illustrates the use of Rule 42 to correct a patent error in an order.