The applicant, Puni Mammihi Jane Modiboa, is the owner of unit 11 in the Guenevere Body Corporate scheme in Wierdapark, Centurion. She brought a dispute resolution application under section 38 of the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 (CSOS Act) against the trustees of the body corporate and its managing agent, Nu'Dor Properties CC. Her complaint was primarily that a levy dispute dating back to 2019 had escalated unfairly: she said that in 2021 she received a letter from the body corporate's attorneys about unpaid levy increases of which she had allegedly not been informed, and that an amount of about R14,000 had grown to approximately R59,000. She alleged that she had been financially bullied and taken advantage of, notwithstanding that she paid the amount on 15 September 2023, and that further interest was still charged during settlement discussions. She also raised further grievances concerning alleged poor scheme management, including a broken house window allegedly caused by staff, a break-in to her car, and cats or dogs damaging her wall and dirtying her yard. The respondents stated that an earlier adjudication order had already been granted against the applicant on 22 July 2020 under CSOS208/GP/19 for payment of R14,571.76 in levies and ancillary amounts; when she failed to comply, a warrant of execution was issued in the Tshwane Magistrate's Court on 14 December 2021. They said the applicant made various payment proposals that were accepted but then not honoured, causing further legal costs, and that after her payment in September 2023 there remained September interest and additional legal charges outstanding. The matter came before the adjudicator on written submissions after non-resolution.
The application was dismissed as misconceived. No order as to costs was made.
A CSOS adjudicator may not reopen a levy dispute that has already been finally determined between the same parties in an earlier adjudication order; the doctrine of res judicata bars such reconsideration. Further, an adjudicator's powers are confined to granting relief specifically authorized by section 39 of the CSOS Act, and an applicant bears the onus of setting out clear, competent and sufficiently particularized relief. Where the alleged complaints are vague or the requested outcome falls outside section 39, the application is misconceived and must be dismissed.
The adjudicator observed that the applicant's remaining September 2023 interest liability resulted from her failure to obtain an updated statement before payment, meaning that the amount she paid was already outdated. The adjudicator also remarked that the applicant's behavioural complaints lacked detail, such as who caused the damage, when it occurred, whether the conduct was accidental or criminal, and which pets or pet owners were involved. These comments were explanatory observations supporting the inadequacy of the application, rather than independent legal holdings.
This decision illustrates important limits on CSOS adjudication. First, a party cannot relitigate a levy dispute already determined in an earlier CSOS order; res judicata applies within the community schemes dispute resolution context. Second, an adjudicator can grant only relief expressly contemplated in section 39 of the CSOS Act, and applicants must define that relief with reasonable certainty. General complaints, requests for the Ombud to investigate, or vague dissatisfaction with management will not suffice. The matter reinforces the statutory and limited jurisdiction of CSOS adjudicators in South African community schemes law.