Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa December / Jan 2016 | Page 28
LEGAL
Rates
Clearance
Certificates on Transfer of Subdivisions
BY DYLAN BRADFORD
T
he recent case of EM and EM Engineering
(Pty) Limited v KwaDukuza Municipality and
Others (9349/2014) [2015] ZAKZDHC 55
(26 June 2015) concerned the liability for rates over
newly subdivided land.
The property owner and developer EM and EM
Engineering (“developer”) registered a general
plan which subdivided their property (“the mother
property”) into ninety-one subdivisions.
A dispute arose between the developer and the
KwaDukuza Municipality (the “Municipality”) when
the developer applied for a rates clearance certificate
from the Municipality in order to transfer two
subdivisions from the mother property to a third party.
The developer, through its interpretation of section
118(1) of the Local Government: Municipal Systems
Act 32 of 2000 (“the Act”), contended that a rates
clearance certificate is required only in respect of
the two subdivisions of the mother property being
transferred.
The Municipality was of the view that on the basis
that the two subdivisions still formed part of the
mother property, the rates and charges payable before a
rates clearance certificate can be issued are those rates
and charges relevant to the mother property as a whole.
The developer submitted that if the Municipality’s
view was adopted, all rates and charges due in respect
of the mother property must be paid on each occasion
before any transfer of any individual subdivision was
allowed.
The court when considering arguments from the
developer and Municipality held that:
1. there had been no change of ownership by the
creation of subdivisions through the registration of
the general plan over the mother property.
2. future transfers of the subdivisions from the mother
property would be recorded in the Deeds Office
in a dedicated register. Until such time that the
subdivisions have been transferred to a new owner
or a certificate of registered title has been issued in
respect of the subdivisions, the subdivisions will be
held by the same title deed as the Mother Property.
3. section 118(1) of the Act prohibits the registration
of transfer of property without the production of
a rates clearance certificate with regard to “that
property”; and
4. the reference to “that property” in section 118(1)
of the Act refers to the subdivision concerned and
not the mother property which has, by virtue of the
registration of the general plan.
Therefore the court held that a rates clearance certificate
need only be issued in respect of the subdivision/s being
transferred and not the mother property as a whole.
This article has been written by Dylan Bradford a
Junior Associate in the Commercial Department at
Garlicke & Bousfield Inc.
For more information contact Dylan on tel :
031 570 5439, email : [email protected].
NOTE: This information should not be regarded as legal
advice and is merely provided for information purposes on
various aspects of property law
RESOURCES
Garlicke & Bousfield
26
DEC/JAN 2016 SA Real Estate Investor
www.reimag.co.za