Estate Living Magazine Smart Moves - Issue 38 February 2019 | Page 13

BUILD NOW OR …. SELLER MAY CLAIM RETRANSFER OF THE PROPERTY OR RAISE A PENALTY Remain alert to conditions in sale agreements in new developments. Municipalities regularly sell vacant property to developers for commercial and residential development. Often a title deed condition is imposed that the property must be improved within a certain time period and, if this is not done, then the municipality may claim re-transfer of the property against payment of the initial purchase price. It is also usual nowadays for developers, when selling land in a proposed development, to insert a clause in the agreement requiring the purchaser to erect a house within a stipulated period, failing which a homeowners’ association (that is often established in such new developments because of a condition of the municipal approval of the development), becomes entitled to impose a penalty. Such measures are effective tools to ensure that the development activity is dynamically geared towards completion, attains its anticipated investment value within a certain time frame and to limit owners’ exposure to the risks and (negative) implications of continuous building in the estate. Usually the obligation to build is included in the title deed given to the purchaser on registration of transfer of ownership, thereby binding the purchaser and usually also successors in title. In an October 2018 Constitutional Court judgment, that Court confi rmed that in the case of a reversionary clause, allowing the municipality to claim re-transfer of a property if a building is not erected within a certain time, the right constitutes a debt which the holder thereof (in that case the municipality) must exercise within three years, failing which it prescribes. This is an important cautionary note for owners, on the one hand, as well as for developers and municipalities on the other. In the case of a penalty provision imposed for failing to build within the required time periods, our courts have similarly confi rmed that such contractually agreed penalties are valid, although the amount thereof should not be unreasonable in the relevant circumstances. This does not mean, however, that such penalties will not reach levels where they substantially dilute a seller’s anticipated profi t, as a December 2016 Gauteng High Court judgment illustrated. The owner there was many years in arrears and failed to heed notices to comply with the requirement. The penalty was substantial. Therefore, when buying land to build on in a proposed development, make sure you understand or negotiate all of the requirements regarding the building time frames. It is to your advantage to obtain the assistance of your conveyancer in this regard, before binding yourself thereto by your signature. Contact STBB I Smith Tabata Buchanan Boyes on www.stbb.co.za COMMERCIAL LAW | CONVEYANCING | CONSTRUCTION LAW | DEVELOPMENT LAW LABOUR LAW | ESTATES | FAMILY LAW | LITIGATION | PERSONAL INJURIES & 3RD PARTY CLAIMS www.stbb.co.za Cape Town 021 406 9100 | Blouberg 021 521 4000 | Claremont 021 673 4700 Fish Hoek 021 784 1580 | Helderberg 021 850 6400 | Tyger Valley 021 943 3800 Bedfordview 011 453 0577 | Centurion 012 001 1546 | Fourways 010 001 2632 Illovo 011 219 6200 | East London 043 721 1234 MORE THAN JUST THE PAPER WORK