The applicant, Stephanus Petrus De Wit, was involved in a dispute with the De Velde Estate Home Owners Association concerning permission to keep a dog, 'Beast', in the estate. De Wit stated that he moved into the estate with his partner in June 2022 and that, due to anxiety, panic disorder, mood disorders and depression, his psychologist supported his keeping Beast as an emotional support animal. Beast allegedly exceeded the estate's prescribed height limit for dogs under the conduct rules. The applicant contended that the trustees unreasonably refused permission, failed properly to consider his circumstances, and applied the rules inconsistently because other larger dogs were allegedly present in the estate. The respondent HOA replied that the applicant was not the registered owner of the unit, that at occupation the relevant forms indicated there were no pets, that the applicant had been visiting the estate with the dog contrary to the rules, and that the board had considered the matter in light of the estate's size, density, limited dog exercise areas, and animal rules. The HOA maintained that only service dogs such as guide dogs, and emotional support dogs that complied with the height restriction, were permitted.
The application was dismissed. The adjudicator ordered that: (a) the relief sought by the applicant is dismissed; (b) the respondent's decision to deny permission to the applicant to keep his dog in the scheme is valid and not unreasonable in the circumstances; (c) the respondent must enforce its conduct rules from the date of receipt of the order; and (d) there is no order as to costs.
A homeowners association's decision refusing permission to keep an animal in a community scheme will not be interfered with under the CSOS Act where the applicable conduct rules require trustee consent not to be unreasonably withheld, and the evidence shows that the trustees objectively and reasonably considered the applicant's circumstances, the interests of other owners and occupiers, and the operational realities of the scheme. In the absence of sufficient proof that the refusal was unreasonable, invalid, or contrary to the best interests of the scheme, CSOS relief must be refused.
The adjudicator made general observations, based on cited case law, that HOA and sectional title rules are contractual in nature though sourced in statute, and that decisions under such rules are reviewable for objective reasonableness. The adjudicator also discussed authorities concerning emotional support dogs, including Body Corporate of the Laguna Ridge Scheme No 152/1987 v Dorse and Body Corporate of Parkwood Park Lifestyle Estate v Nel, but these discussions were illustrative and not determinative because the adjudicator found the present facts distinguishable. The judgment also noted the applicant's appeal rights under section 57 of the CSOS Act, which is procedural and not part of the ratio.
This adjudication is significant in community schemes law because it affirms that CSOS will generally defer to the decision of a homeowners association on pet applications where the association has applied its mind properly, considered the interests of the scheme as a whole, and acted reasonably under its conduct rules. It also reflects the continued use in South African community schemes disputes of the objective reasonableness standard drawn from case law such as North Global Properties, and shows that emotional support animal claims will not automatically override valid scheme rules without adequate proof and balancing of competing interests.