The applicant, Hendrik Douw Louwrens, is the owner of unit 23 in the Te Waterkant sectional title scheme and therefore a member of the respondent body corporate. He brought an application to the Community Schemes Ombud Service (CSOS) under section 38 of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011, seeking relief under section 39(4)(a), namely an order requiring the body corporate to call a general meeting to deal with specified business. The dispute arose from the applicant’s dissatisfaction with the trustees’ governance of the scheme. He alleged that a special levy of R250,000 for a security camera project was imposed irregularly and without the necessary approval after the December 2022 AGM had merely resolved that trustees should investigate the option and revert to owners. He also contended that the scheme’s 10-year maintenance plan had never properly been presented to members and did not comply with the prescribed management regulations. More broadly, he complained that owners were being denied a proper opportunity to speak and participate in decision-making at general meetings. The respondent relied on the December 2022 AGM minutes, which recorded unanimous approval of the updated 10-year maintenance plan and a unanimous decision that trustees should investigate the proposed camera system and report back. The respondent also relied on a trustee round-robin resolution dated 1 June 2023 authorising a special levy of R250,000 for installation of perimeter-monitoring cameras, on the basis that the measure was necessary to improve security and reduce future security guard costs. The trustees had communicated the intervention in reports to owners, and no objections had been received. A hearing was held on 28 November 2023 after conciliation had failed.
The application was dismissed in terms of section 53(1)(a) of the CSOS Act as being without substance. Each party was ordered to pay its own costs.
An application under section 39(4)(a) of the CSOS Act to compel a community scheme association to call a general meeting will not succeed where the applicant has not shown that available internal remedies for convening such a meeting have first been pursued, particularly the PMR 17(4) procedure requiring a written request supported by members holding the requisite quotas. CSOS adjudicators may grant only the statutory relief properly sought within section 39, and an application may be dismissed under section 53(1)(a) where it is misconceived or without substance. Trustees are empowered under the STSMA and prescribed management rules to impose a special levy for necessary expenses that cannot reasonably be delayed until the next budget cycle.
The adjudicator observed that the respondent should take note of the prescriptive requirements governing the 10-year Maintenance, Repair and Replacement Plan under the prescribed management rules. The adjudicator also remarked that the scheme’s auditors had not reported irregularities concerning PMR 21, 24 and 26. Further, by reference to Bushwillow Park, Bato Star, and Wilds Homeowners Association, the adjudicator made broader comments about the reasonableness standard and the need for caution before overriding the internal autonomy of scheme governance. These observations were supportive but not strictly necessary to the dismissal, which rested primarily on the lack of substance and failure to exhaust internal remedies.
The decision is significant in South African community schemes law because it underscores that a CSOS applicant seeking an order to compel a body corporate to call a general meeting must first make proper use of the internal governance mechanisms provided in the prescribed management rules, especially the requisition procedure for a special general meeting. It also reaffirms that CSOS adjudicators are creatures of statute whose remedial powers are limited to those expressly conferred by section 39 of the CSOS Act. The ruling further illustrates judicial and quasi-judicial restraint in interfering with the operational decisions of trustees where those decisions fall within their statutory powers and are not shown to be capricious or unreasonable.