A recent SCA ruling has changed the way levies are seen, handled, and applied to homeowners who reside in South Africa’s community schemes. The ruling established the significance of collecting levies with accuracy, evidence, and procedural fairness in addition to confirming that it is legitimate to do so.
For many years, trustees functioned according to unwritten agreements that were either recorded in meeting minutes or transmitted orally. However, the SCA firmly decided that such informality is inconsequential to good administration. The HOA’s foundation articles and title deeds contain legally binding responsibilities known as levies. It is not only foolish but also unsustainable to ignore or question them without a valid reason.
Trustees now have to show how levies were determined, approved, and disseminated. Saying “this is how we’ve always done it” is no longer sufficient. The verdict, which urges groups to support their budgets with records, resolutions, and logic, has created a clear line between custom and lawfulness.
| Item | Key Context |
|---|---|
| Court | Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA), South Africa |
| Act at Issue | Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 (CSOS Act) |
| Main Legal Issue | Enforceability of Homeowners Association (HOA) levies and adjudicator powers |
| Affected Parties | Residential property owners, HOA trustees, adjudicators |
| Legal Outcome | Reinforced mandatory levy payments and clarified adjudication limits |
| Practical Effect | HOAs must follow procedural governance; owners cannot opt out of levies |
| Reference Link | https://businesstech.co.za/news/property/816013/hoa-levies-scourt-landmark-ruling/ |

The court paid close attention to adjudicators’ dispute resolution techniques during the hearing. It underlined that adjudicators are subject to monitoring just like trustees. They must base their conclusions on sound reasoning, logic, and verifiable facts. Emotional inclinations or imprecise judgments are no longer adequate. Even though it is a procedural modification, it effectively levels the playing field.
The decision enhances governance and trust by mandating adherence to due process. Trustees will be protected from criticism if they act openly and record their choices. On the other hand, people who depend on out-of-date presumptions or unrecorded judgments risk having their authority contested.
I’ve attended a number of contentious HOA meetings over the last few years where board members have fought to defend increased costs or defend a special levy. Even the best-laid plans fall apart in the absence of a paper trail. This ruling makes it apparent that accurate documentation and open communication are now necessary rather than discretionary.
Clarity for homeowners who want to challenge taxes is one especially positive effect. They can now appeal unreasonable choices, demand adherence to protocols, and request evidence. Although it has been clarified, the threshold for contesting a charge has not been lowered.
Because this verdict makes the norms of engagement exceedingly clear, we can anticipate a large decrease in disputes in the years to come. Trustees will be aware of expectations. Owners will be aware of their legal rights. There will be less chaos and better lighting on the way to resolution.
South Africa’s estates and sectional plans can develop into more stable, open communities with the help of planned changes and a stronger commitment to recorded governance. The message of the SCA is fair but firm: authority must be acquired via legitimacy rather than presumption.
The verdict is expected to significantly improve the experience of all parties involved, including owners, managers, trustees, and legal experts, by integrating responsibility into the legal framework of HOA governance.
Perhaps most encouragingly, it underscores that fairness is derived from honesty, consistency, and an uncompromising dedication to doing things correctly the first time, rather than just from formality.
