05 March 2019

Upon checking your mailbox, you’re surprised to find a white envelope with the signature of your Body Corporate and your name just below it. Contained therein is bold red typeface notifying you of a R500 fine for exceeding the 35 km/hour speed limit within the estate. After the wave of panic that follows getting caught red handed has abated, a new sense of unjustified indignation follows: What right do they have to issue fines? 

WHAT DOES THE LAW SAY?
According to the Sectional Title Act, HOAs and Body Corporates are granted the right to issue management and conduct rules. As with most terms and conditions sheets, most homeowners blindly sign these documents without taking the time to conduct a close reading of the regulations and consequent repercussions contained therein. In the same way that homeowners can easily violate these rules without knowing it, Home Owners Associations can also get away with issuing fines for things that are not stipulated in the rules of the sectional title complex.

GET A COPY OF THE RULES
The first thing you should do when issued with a fine by your HOA or Body Corporate is to get hold of the latest copy of the rules. A copy of these rules should be readily available to all residents. If you were not informed of these rules upon purchasing within the estate, or if amendments were made to the document without a resident’s meeting to discuss the proposed changes, then you might be able to make a case for having the fine scrapped.

WHAT ABOUT SPEEDING FINES?
When it comes to speeding fines specifically, residents should find out whether the roads within the estate are registered as public roads or private roads. If public, then HOAs will need to have received permission from the relevant MEC in terms of section 57(6) of the NRTA to put up their own road signs and enforce their own traffic fines. If they’ve failed to do this, then they may not issue fines. However, all other regulations regarding public roads are still enforceable. If the roads are registered as private roads, then the HOAs rules of conduct are the regulations that govern these roads and you will have to adhere to them.   

DID YOU RECEIVE A WARNING?
HOAs and Body Corporates are required to issue warnings before they may issue fines. If you received no such warning before receiving the fine, then your body corporate is acting prematurely and you are justified in reminding them of the due protocol. The accused resident is also meant to be invited to attend a meeting with the trustees if the problem persists after the first warning has been issued. At this meeting, the resident may plead his/her case and argue for why further action should not be taken. If you believe that you have been treated unfairly, then your best line of defence would be to argue that whatever rule you may have broken is not reasonable, fair and equally applied to all owners in the complex, as these are the legally binding parameters for setting up rules within sectional titles.

ARE YOU A TENANT?
Governing bodies of sectional titles may only issue fines to the owner of the property and not to the tenant that is currently occupying it. The landlord may stipulate in the rental agreement whether the tenant will be liable for such fines, but the body corporate cannot take it upon itself to decide this.    

FINAL ADVICE
Information is power. The less informed you choose to be, the easier it will be to get taken advantage of. To keep informed, subscribe to estate newsletters and attend the regular resident’s meetings.

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