The applicant, Andisiwe Anelisa Mbete, is the registered owner of unit G01 in Elgin Lodge Body Corporate, Stellendale Village, Kuils River, Cape Town. She brought a dispute under section 38 of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 seeking relief under section 39(1)(c), contending that special levies, interest and legal charges debited to her account were unreasonable and incorrectly billed. Her complaint was that certain charges had effectively been duplicated between the Elgin Lodge Body Corporate and the Stellendale Master Home Owners Association (SMHOA), despite prior discussions indicating that body corporate and HOA budgets should be separated and reconciled. She also challenged the debiting of legal charges to her account. The respondent body corporate opposed the application, asserting that levies payable to the HOA were to be paid into the body corporate account, that the applicant owed the amounts reflected on the levy statement, and that interest and legal fees were due because the account had been handed to attorneys. The adjudicator noted that the applicant did not appear to dispute owing levies as such, but disputed the reasonableness and correctness of the special levies, interest and especially the legal charges levied against her.
The application was granted. The respondent was ordered to remove the impugned legal charges from the applicant's account and may recover only levies and interest, if applicable, from the applicant. Legal costs may only be claimed if the applicant consents or there is authority in a judgment or order by a judge, adjudicator or arbitrator and the bill has been taxed by the taxing master. No order as to costs was made.
A body corporate may recover levies and, where applicable, interest from an owner, but it may not debit the owner's account with legal costs unless those legal costs are lawfully recoverable in terms of the STSMA and prescribed management rules, namely where the owner has consented or there is authority in a judgment or order by a judge, adjudicator or arbitrator, and the costs have been taxed if not agreed. Charges imposed outside those requirements are unreasonable or incorrectly billed for purposes of section 39(1)(c) of the CSOS Act and may be set aside.
The adjudicator discussed the broader statutory scheme relating to unanimous resolutions, adverse effect on owners, and the rationale in Marine Sands that an increased levy burden constitutes a diminution of ownership rights. To the extent those remarks addressed general levy increases and owner consent more broadly, they were ancillary to the core issue in this matter, which was the recoverability of legal charges debited to the applicant's account. The judgment text also contains some uncertainty regarding the respondent's precise description, referring both to Elgin Lodge Body Corporate and to Trustees of Magenta Body Corporate; the order nevertheless proceeded on the basis that the relevant respondent was the body corporate responsible for the applicant's scheme.
The decision is significant in South African community schemes law because it affirms limits on a body corporate's power to debit owners' accounts with legal fees. It reinforces the protection afforded by PMR 25(5) and confirms that legal costs in levy collection matters are not automatically recoverable from an owner unless properly agreed, authorised and, where necessary, taxed. The order also reflects the CSOS's role in scrutinising the reasonableness and lawfulness of levy-related charges in sectional title governance.