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Sectional Title Levy's
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Whether you are an owner, a trustee, a managing agent or an attorney,
 you will agree that levies are essential to the efficient running of
sectional title schemes. Levies are the 'lifeblood' of the body
corporate; owners have to pay them, and trustees, managing agents and
 attorneys may have to collect them. Every person involved in a
sectional scheme needs to understand how levies work, from the
procedures to be followed when they are charged, to the consequences
 of non-payment.

Why are levies raised?Â

Each body corporate is required in terms of the Sectional Titles Act
 of 1986 (herafter referred to as “the Actâ€?) to establish an
administrative fund sufficient, in the opinion of the body corporate,
 to cover its expenses. A body corporate's expenses include the following:

    the repairs, upkeep, control, management and administration of the
 common property (including reasonable provision for future maintenance
 and repairs)
    payment of taxes and other local authority charges for electricity,
 gas, water, fuel, sanitary and other services to the building/s and land
    insurance premiums
    the discharge of any duty or fulfillment of any other obligation of
 the body corporate.Â

The process – from budget to levy

The trustees estimate the body corporate’s expenditure for the following
 financial year, and the budget is considered at the AGM (annual general
meeting). Once approved by owners, the trustees meet distribute the
estimated expenditure among the owners in order to work out what each owner
 will pay as an ordinary levy; in what instalments each levy will be paid;
 and what rate of interest will be charged on overdue payments. The trustees
 then notify each owner of the amounts due, and each owner is then liable to
pay such levies, normally in monthly instalments.Â

Ascertaining the owner's levy

The approved budget of estimated expenditure is normally divided among owners
in accordance with each owner’s PQ (participation quota). The PQ is a
 fraction worked out by dividing the floor area of each owner's section
(as shown on the sectional plan) by the total of all the floor areas of
sections in the scheme.

However, the PQ formula for levy contributions is not absolute; it can be
 varied if the correct procedure is followed. The Act makes it possible for
 the owners’ levy contributions to be modified so as not to be based on
the PQ formula. For example, the owners could resolve that those owning
ground-floor sections should not have to contribute towards lift maintenance
 costs.

Special levies in special circumstances

The trustees may from time to time charge special levies for expenses which
are necessary but were not budgeted for in the estimated expenditure approved
at the previous AGM. Trustees do not have the power to charge a special levy
 when a budgeted expense exceeds the approved estimate. But they can raise a
 special levy for unexpected expenses which were not included in the budget.
 These special levies may be payable in one lump sum or by such instalments
as the trustees deem fit.

It is important to note that the trustees alone have the power to charge
special levies for genuinely necessary and unbudgeted expenses. Many owners
think that if they were not consulted by the trustees or did not vote in
 favour of a special levy, it was invalidly raised. Not so – trustees are
 under no obligation to consult owners in this regard.

Â
 

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