Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa November 2014 | Page 37

BY KARIEN HUNTER LEGAL Property Sales Agreements O ften, sale agreements – on closer scrutiny – are not worth the paper they are written on. If what is actually sold and the terms of the sale are not properly reflected in the agreement of sale, the agreement is either invalid, or can beset aside by the court. What is not reflected on the sale agreement, does not exist. Some of the most common pitfalls are detailed below. 1. A lack of a proper description of the property sold For an agreement to be valid, it has to be in writing. Every aspect of the sale must be in writing, most importantly, the property description. With sectional title, this will include a reference to the name of the complex, the Unit number, and any Exclusive Use areas allocated to that particular unit. However, often only the unit number is mentioned on the sale agreement and no mention is made of the Exclusive Use areas allocated, which should be notarially registered against the title deed as an Exclusive Use area with a specific number. For all intents and purposes, the property has then been sold excluding such area. Conveyancers can only transfer what was sold – and this excludes any exclusive areas not reflected on the sale agreement. The purchaser would have the perfect excuse to cancel the sale agreement. 2. Unneccessary use of suspensive conditions Most sale agreements contain suspensive conditions, for example, that the sale is subject to the purchaser being able to raise a bond, or subject to the sale of the purchaser’s property. Both these instances are future, uncertain events and the sale is ‘subject to’ such event(s). However, agents often misconstrue this and would make a sale ‘subject to’, for example, the seller fixing a roof. In such instance, agents are advised to avoid the www.reimag.co.za Not always worth the paper it’s written on use of the words ’subject to’ but to rather make it a term of the agreement to which the seller would have to adhere to within a certain time frame: ‘the seller shall attend to the repairs to the roof as set out in the written quotation annexed to the sale agreement, at his own expense, no later than__(insert date)’. Should the seller fail to do so timeously, the purchaser can simply place the seller on terms to perform, or sue for the costs of doing the repairs himself, but the agreement will not automatically fall away and become of no force and effect if the repairs were not attended to by a certain date. 3. Failure to properly identify signatories If a sale agreement is only signed on behalf of the seller by the one spouse in a marriage in community of property, then there is no sale. Likewise, where a trust purchases or sells a property, all trustees have to sign, or a resolution needs to be in place, authorising one person to sign on behalf of the trust – before the agreement is signed. 4. Failure to initial changes Any change to a sale agreement effectively constitutes a counter-offer which needs to be signed by both parties in order for the contract to be valid. So, if the seller has in principle accepted the purchaser’s offer, but added a clause to the sale agreement to the effect that his precious cycads would not form part of the sale and would be removed by him on transfer, then there is no agreement – unless the purchaser has agreed to it and initialled the clause in question. RESOURCES AMC HUNTER November 2014 SA Real Estate Investor 37