The applicant, Pioneer Valley Homeowners Association, a community scheme under the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011, brought an application against the respondent, Ayanda Sicelo, the owner of erf 661 within the scheme. The dispute concerned unpaid HOA levies. The applicant initially stated that the respondent's monthly levy was R100 and that arrears stood at R1,925.63, but the statements of account placed before the adjudicator reflected arrears of R2,568.39 inclusive of interest. The respondent did not deny liability and instead proposed that R200 be deducted monthly on the 15th of each month until the debt was settled. The applicant also sought further relief requiring the respondent to sign a debit order for arrears and future levies, and to pay R500 to Lime Property Management for administration of the dispute application.
The respondent was declared liable to the applicant for arrear levies in the sum of R2,568.39 and was ordered to pay that amount on or before 1 December 2023. The applicant's requests that the respondent sign a debit order and pay R500 to Lime Property Management were refused. No order as to costs was made.
An owner within a homeowners' association is bound by the association's constitution and rules, including obligations to pay levies and contractually authorised interest on arrears. Where arrear levies are proved on a balance of probabilities and are not genuinely disputed, a CSOS adjudicator may grant relief under section 39(1)(e) for payment of the outstanding amount. However, a CSOS adjudicator may grant only orders authorised by section 39 of the CSOS Act and cannot order relief, such as compelling signature of a debit order or recovery of non-authorised administrative charges, if such relief falls outside the Act and applicable directives.
The adjudicator made general observations about the importance of strict adherence by homeowners to levy obligations because HOA expenses such as security, waste management, insurance, rates, taxes and administration depend on regular contributions. The decision also referred generally to the principle that repositories of statutory power may exercise only powers conferred by law. The judgment contains an apparent inconsistency between the executive summary, which states that the relief sought is granted, and the body/order, which grants only part of the relief; the operative order governs the outcome.
The matter illustrates the enforceability of homeowners' association levy obligations through the CSOS adjudication process and confirms that owners within an HOA are bound by the association's constitution and rules as a matter of contract. It is also significant for confirming the limits of CSOS adjudicators' statutory powers: even where an applicant is substantially successful on the debt claim, relief outside section 39 of the CSOS Act cannot be granted. The case reflects the distinction between competent statutory relief and private administrative arrangements sought by managing agents or associations.