Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

All sectional title schemes must be audited every year

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WHILE the Sectional Titles Act of 1986 rules and regulation­s were in force, only sectional title schemes with 10 or more units had to have their schemes audited.

For schemes with fewer than 10 units, the financial statements could be signed off by an auditor or accounting officer and the choice was left to the body corporate as to which to employ.

Now that the new Sectional Title Schemes Management Act is in force, however, all sectional title schemes, no matter the size, must have their finan- cial records audited each year.

“They must be presented at the annual general meeting, which should be held within four months of the end of the financial year,” says Michael Bauer, general manager of property management company IHFM.

This is according to the Sectional Titles Schemes Management Regulation­s, 2016, where the Management Rules in Annexure 1 state:

26(5) The audit of a body corporate’s annual financial statements:

(a) Must be carried out by an independen­t auditor who has not participat­ed in the preparatio­n of the annual financial statements or advised on any aspect of the accounts of the body corporate during the period being reported on.

(b) Need not be carried out in accordance with any recognised framework of guidelines for financial accounting.

(c) Must include opinions as to whether or not:

(i) the annual financial statements accurately reflect the financial position of the body corporate for the finan- cial year under review, with such qualificat­ions and reservatio­ns as the auditor considers necessary;

(ii) the body corporate has complied with the accounting requiremen­ts set out in rules 21, 24 and this section, with a specific descriptio­n of any failure to comply with such requiremen­ts;

(iii) the books of account of the body corporate have been kept and its funds have been managed so as to provide a reasonable level of protection against theft or fraud; and

(iv) the financial affairs of the body corporate appear to be effectivel­y managed.

(d) Must be completed within four months of the end of the body corporate’s financial year.

“One noteworthy aspect of the new audit requiremen­ts, is that the registered auditors must be independen­t of the scheme and must not have been involved in the preparatio­n of the annual financial statements, nor should they have advised on any aspect of the body corporate’s accounts during the period been reported on,” says Bauer.

“This requiremen­t may seem onerous and perhaps unnecessar­y – particular­ly in smaller schemes where the cost of an auditor might be quite high in comparison to the amount of money being handled. But this provision has been included to protect the integrity of the reports... where hundreds of thousands of rands, if not millions, is handled each year.”

Michael Bauer is a regular contributo­r to www. sectionalt­itlesa.co.za. Call 083 255 4442 or email michael@ ihfm.co.za

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