The applicant, Shireen Naidoo, is the registered owner of unit 32 in Anza Court Body Corporate. She alleged that heavy rains in April 2022 damaged the ceiling in her lounge and bedroom and that water seeped down the kitchen wall into the motor of her fridge, causing it to malfunction. She reported the matter to the trustees/body corporate. According to her, the body corporate agreed to repair the ceiling if she paid an excess of R1 000, which she refused, and denied liability for the fridge. Separately, she discovered that an additional insurance premium of R136.03 had been debited monthly to her levy account for many years in error. After querying this, the managing agent acknowledged the error, cancelled the charge, and the trustees approved a credit of approximately R4 987 to R4 989 for 36 months. The applicant sought a fuller refund dating back to 2014, with interest, and also sought repair or compensation for the fridge. The respondent stated that an insurance claim for water damage to units 31 and 32 had been approved, that the trustees had agreed the body corporate would cover the R1 000 excess, but that the applicant elected not to proceed with the repairs because she intended to repaint the unit herself. The respondent also denied liability for the fridge on the basis that household contents were not covered by the body corporate’s insurance and that no proof linked the fridge damage to the roof leak.
The application was dismissed. The relief sought in terms of section 39(1)(c) of the CSOS Act was refused, and the relief sought in terms of section 39(6)(a) was refused. No order as to costs was made.
An applicant seeking relief under the CSOS Act must prove the factual basis for the order sought on a balance of probabilities. In a claim relating to repairs allegedly caused by leaks from common property, the applicant must adduce evidence establishing the source of the leak and the causal connection between that leak and the damage claimed. In a claim for repayment of erroneously charged amounts on a levy account, the claim is subject to ordinary prescription principles, and absent sufficient evidence proving the deductions and their duration, relief may be refused. A refund already made in respect of the unprescribed period may be treated as adequate where the applicant fails to prove entitlement to more.
The adjudicator observed generally that if a leak originates inside a section, repair liability rests with the owner of that section, whereas where another section or the common property causes damage, the responsible owner or body corporate may be liable for reasonable repair costs. The adjudicator also commented that a plumber’s report would ordinarily be necessary to confirm that a leak originated from common property. In addition, the adjudicator remarked on the applicant’s responsibility under the CSOS Practice Directive to ensure that all relevant material is submitted with the application.
The decision is significant in the community schemes context because it illustrates the evidential burden on an owner seeking CSOS relief against a body corporate. It also shows the interaction between the CSOS remedial framework, the STSMA allocation of maintenance responsibilities between owners and body corporates, and ordinary principles of prescription. The ruling underscores that applicants must place adequate documentary and expert evidence before the adjudicator and that historic levy or contribution disputes may be curtailed by prescription.