The applicant, Onyx Property Owners Association, is a community scheme and a non-profit common law association established to assume the functions and powers associated with the body corporate of The Onyx sectional title scheme. The first and second respondents, Ian Hawthorne and Aldona Hawthorne, are the joint registered owners of unit 1008 in the scheme. The association alleged that the respondents had fallen into arrears on their levy account, that monthly levy statements and arrear reminders had been sent, and that the last payment received was in June 2022. The applicant sought an order requiring payment of R116,031.00, being arrear levies and ancillary charges including interest, and also sought recovery of a CSOS application administration fee of R1,150.00 plus VAT. The respondents did not file a substantive response to dispute the debt; the only email recorded from the second respondent stated that he had nothing to do with the matter and asked to be removed from the email. The matter proceeded to adjudication after no proper reply was made to the applicant's statement of claim.
Application upheld in part. The adjudicator ordered that Ian Hawthorne and Aldona Hawthorne, jointly and severally, pay the applicant R116,031.00 in respect of levies and ancillary charges, including CSOS levies and interest, up to and including March 2023. Payment was ordered in 10 equal instalments of R11,603.10, commencing on 1 April 2024 and thereafter on the first business day of each consecutive month until paid in full. The order stated that regular ongoing monthly levies remained payable, that interest was already included in the outstanding amount, and that default on any one instalment would render the full balance immediately due and payable. The applicant's claim for the CSOS administration fee of R1,150.00 plus VAT was dismissed. There was no order as to costs.
Where a community scheme proves through its governing constitution and account records that owners are in arrears with levies, and the indebtedness is not genuinely disputed, a CSOS adjudicator may order payment of the arrear levies and constitutionally authorised ancillary charges on a balance of probabilities. Owners' liability for levies arises from the scheme's constitutive documents. However, an adjudicator may grant only relief authorised by section 39 of the CSOS Act, and relief not contemplated by that section must be refused.
The adjudicator observed that levies are the 'lifeblood' of a homeowners association and that trustees cannot perform their functions without owners' financial contributions. The adjudicator also noted that the purpose of the order was to bring closure to the dispute while considering both the rights and duties of the respondents. These remarks provide contextual justification but were not independently necessary to the dispositive outcome.
The decision illustrates the CSOS's role in enforcing levy obligations within community schemes and confirms that an owners association may recover arrear levies and contractually authorised ancillary charges through CSOS adjudication when the debt is proved on a balance of probabilities. It also shows the limits of CSOS remedial powers: relief must fall within the types of orders authorised by section 39 of the CSOS Act, and claims outside that statutory framework may be refused even where the main debt succeeds. The order is also practically significant for recognising structured repayment terms while preserving the association's right to ongoing levies and acceleration upon default.