The first applicant was the Trustees of Vista Villas Body Corporate, with the second to fourth applicants being individual unit owners and trustees at the scheme. The respondents were unit owners at Vista Villas, one of whom was also described as a current trustee. The applicants alleged that the respondents, described as a group of disgruntled owners, had initiated a petition for an urgent special general meeting (SGM) to vote on the removal of three of the five current trustees, namely the second, third and fourth applicants. The applicants contended that the allegations underlying the proposed removals were unfounded and that the respondents had not provided evidentiary material supporting those allegations. They approached the Community Schemes Ombud Service (CSOS) under section 38 of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011, purportedly seeking relief under section 39(7)(a), including an urgent order halting the SGM, compelling the respondents to provide supporting documents and evidence, requiring participation in mediation or arbitration, reinstatement of trustees if removed, and an order directing the respondents to cease detrimental conduct. The adjudication proceeded on the papers. By the time of determination, the SGM the applicants sought to halt had already been held.
The application was dismissed in terms of section 53(1)(a) of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 on the ground that it was frivolous, vexatious, misconceived and without substance. No order as to costs was made.
A CSOS adjudicator may grant only those remedies authorised by section 39 of the CSOS Act; relief falling outside that section, including interdictory relief of the kind sought to halt an SGM and compel evidentiary disclosure in the form demanded, is incompetent before CSOS. Where an application seeks relief outside the statutory framework and is unsupported in substance, it may be dismissed under section 53(1)(a) as frivolous, vexatious, misconceived and without substance.
The adjudicator remarked that even if section 39 had empowered the granting of an interdict, the matter would in any event have been overtaken by events because the SGM had already been held ('the horse has already bolted'). The adjudicator also observed that, although the respondents had incurred the burden of opposing the application, a costs award was not justified on the facts. The exact official law report citation of the High Court authority referred to was not provided in the judgment text; only the case name, court, case number A31/2018, and paragraph reference were mentioned.
The decision underscores that CSOS adjudicators are creatures of statute whose remedial powers are limited to the orders specifically authorised by section 39 of the CSOS Act. It highlights that CSOS is not a forum for general interdictory relief or for remedies framed outside the statutory categories, and that misconceived applications may be dismissed summarily under section 53(1)(a). The ruling also clarifies that the CSOS process is based on conciliation and adjudication, not arbitration or mediation in the form sought by litigants. For community schemes and sectional title disputes, the matter is a practical reminder that relief must be carefully aligned to the statutory powers of the Ombud and adjudicator.