Maintenance and
Sectional Titles: Who must pay?
Posted on 25 June 2013
An issue that can often
raise the blood pressure of sectional title owners, is the question surrounding
maintenance within a sectional title scheme, particularly where maintenance
costs are going to cost an arm and a leg. So where does the responsibility of
the sectional title owner for maintenance begin and end?
To answer this
question, one must first recognize that there are different types (or classes)
of property when dealing with sectional title schemes. They are common property, sections and parts of the common property that are subject to rights of
exclusive use by one or more owners in the scheme.
The Sectional Titles
Act dictates that the Body Corporate is responsible for the maintenance of
the common property.
This is property not forming part of a section and includes the land in the
scheme. The Body Corporate must see to it that the common property is
maintained, repaired when necessary and foot the bill for the repairs. The
common property can include, inter alia, elevators, the outside of the
building, roof, common gardens and parking bays, driveways, security systems,
street lights, communal passages and staircases, and shared swimming pools. An
exception can exist where it comes to geysers. Often a geyser is situated above
the ceiling, and can then be seen to form part of the “common property”, yet in
this instance, the owner often remains responsible for the upkeep and repair
and not the Body Corporate.
The maintenance
of sections is
the sole responsibility of the owner. A section extends from the centre line
(median line) of the walls, floors and ceilings, this area is the property of
the owner and with ownership of said area follows the responsibility for
maintenance and repair. Keep in mind that shirking this responsibility may have
a negative effect on another section. Should there for example, be a leak in
your section and the water causes damage to a section below or adjacent, you
may face a claim for damage from the owner of the section below or adjacent and
not the Body Corporate.
There is a noteworthy exception
to the maintenance of a section. The Body Corporate is responsible for
maintenance of “pipes, wires, cables and ducts” in a section that also serve
any other section or the common property.
The third type of
property is the exclusive use
areas. As the name suggests, these areas remain common property
and the responsibility for maintenance rests with the Body Corporate, but the
Sectional Titles Act states that costs associated with these areas must be
recovered from the owner or owners who enjoy the rights of exclusive use to the
said areas. On the one hand the Body Corporate must see to the maintenance of
these areas, but the owner or owners are financially responsible. It is common
practice that the owner who is financially responsible for this area, maintain
the area with the result that it is unnecessary for the Body Corporate to spend
money on this area and then still recover such from the owner.
Although the question
of maintenance appears straightforward, disputes are common and frequent. A simple
example is where a leak in section A causes damage to section B or the common
property and the owner of A does not repair the leak. May owner B or the Body
Corporate take matters in their own hands? How will they gain entry without
permission from owner A? If the Body Corporate or owner B repairs the leak and
owner A refuses to reimburse the Body Corporate or owner B, what recourse can
be followed?
Because of the
financial and legal implications of maintenance and the potential complexity of
a dispute it is advisable that legal advice be obtained in the event of such a
dispute to help determine the allocation of responsibility and merits of your
claim.
Taken form:
Lange
Carr & Wessels Inc. Newsletter 6-2013
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