SA Affordable Housing September - October 2019 // ISSUE: 78 | Page 37
LEGAL MATTERS
“…shown on a general plan, the owner of land subdivided
shall furnish a copy of the general plan to the Registrar, who
shall, subject to compliance with requirements of the Section
and any other law, register the plan and open a register in
which all registrable transactions affecting the respective
lots or erven shown on the plan shall be registered.”
The substratum for registrable transactions affecting
the respective erven shown on the plan is the general plan,
and comes into being once the general plan is registered
in the deeds registry. The purpose of the provisions
of section 46 is thus to ensure the recognition of the
existence of each and every individual erf depicted on the
general plan and adherence to that plan in regard to all
registrable transactions.
The Articles of Association of the HOA provided that the
HOA’s members were the developer and all other persons
who are registered owners of residential property in the
township. It was therefore clear that the developer was a
member of the HOA as well as the registered owner of the
erven reflected on the general plan that have not been
transferred to third parties. Accordingly, the conclusion that
the developer fell within the group that can be described
as ‘members of the HOA who are owners of erven and units
in the township’, was inescapable, and it was therefore
liable for levies in the same way as are all other owners of
erven. The ‘remaining extent’ (which is those erven not yet
transferred to third parties) is not a ‘stand’ (also referred to
as an erf), nor is it a unit, and the levies are not apportioned
to it but to its components, being the erven.
Note that the court indicated that the present matter
can be distinguished from previous judgments (in Florida
Hills and Rhynfeld) where the court concluded that when
township property is sold as individual erven, the remainder
of the property is reduced from time to time by the sale of
individual erven, but that the unit of the remainder retains
its own identity and continues to appear as the remainder
in the deeds registry. It accordingly concluded that it was
that remainder which had to be entered in the municipal
valuation roll as a unit in the ownership of the township
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owner. These judgments had to do with the relationship
between a local authority and a township developer
and with the valuation of unsold lots in a township. The
legal nature of the relationship between the parties
in those matters was one that flowed ex lege, and the
dispute centered around the method used to value such
erven. The context of the present dispute was certainly
distinguishable.
CONCLUSION
This judgment is part of a growing string of matters
in which developers approach a court for clarification
on the basis for which they are held liable for
homeowners’ association levies in respect of unsold
erven in a new township. Their liability is first and
foremost determined by the association’s governing
documentation read in the context of the local
authority approval conditions. As soon as the liability
is linked to ownership of a property or erf in the
township, it will include the developer who becomes
owner of the unsold erven in the township register
on registration, unless there are specific provisions to
the contrary.
Developers can and often do, by way of special
conditions in the association's constitution, exempt
themselves from paying levies in respect of unsold
properties still owned by the developer. The rationale is
that the developer is usually liable for the expenses of
providing services, roads and infrastructure during the
development period, and should not be burdened with
levies in respect of its unsold erven in that period.
Clearly much care must therefore be applied, and
specialist opinion obtained by the developer in the
planning of the development, the interaction with the
local authority and the drafting of all the governing
documentation of the relevant HOA.
STBB offers a variety of legal services where our expertise and friendly approach allows us to deal with every legal matter in
an effective and efficient manner ensuring a pleasant experience for our clients.
In the property sector we cover:
• Property law
We offer benchmark services for both retail and development property transactions. We are reputed for our teams of
seasoned property law practitioners who share an extensive set of skills to smoothly address every aspect of property
law and land development transactions.
• Local Government, Planning, Development and Environmental law
Our Development Law Unit has nine specialists addressing development requirements in the fields of planning law,
environmental law, construction law, renewable energy law and local government law. The Unit partners with land
developers to function as a vital watchdog and one-stop-shop for all legal requirements of land development projects,
including low cost housing projects.
For more information related to the information published, please contact Gert Minnaar at [email protected] or visit our
website https://www.stbb.co.za to view contact information for your nearest branch.
www.saaffordablehousing.co.za
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