SA Affordable Housing May - June 2019 // Issue: 76 | Page 34

LEGAL MATTERS The arbitrary and incorrect interpretation of legal principles and the current law by municipal officials can lead to disastrous consequences. By Gert Minnaar I n the affordable housing market it is important that the policies and business rules of municipalities reflect the correct legal position as prescribed in legislation. If not, it introduces procedures which are not constitutional and can be challenged in a court of law. This also complicates the already challenging and strained development environment unnecessarily, with needless costs and (unwelcome) time delays, which endanger the developers’ bottom line and continued existence. In the affordable housing market, with FLISP and Bonded housing products, that focus primarily on first time homeowners (in the price bracket between R400 000 to R1 000 000), profit margins are already fairly tight for developers. The arbitrary and incorrect interpretation of legal principles and current laws by municipal officials can lead to disastrous consequences, firstly to the developers that are the main stakeholders and carry the financial risk of developments, as well as the vulnerable end-users of the value chain. BUSINESS RULE 001/10-03/17 On 13 March 2017 the Building Control Department of the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality implemented a business rule, which states that no applications for the approval of buildings plans will be considered for unregistered *erven with the Registrar of Deeds. All applications must be for registered erven and accompanied by related title deeds. It also states that the submission of approved surveyor general diagrams and general plans will not be accepted because the diagrams do not constitute registration of the erven with the Registrar of Deeds. This means that this department, in terms of its interpretation of a ‘registered erf’, from that date on refuses to receive applications for the approval of buildings plans for any erf in a newly established township, where an erf is still held by the township applicant under the township title for that township, unless the township owner registered a Certificate of Registered Title for such an erf, separate from that township title. It appears that the department, in formulating this rule, relies on a ruling from the Geographic Information System (GIS) Department of the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan 32 MAY - JUNE 2019 When is an erf regarded as a ‘registered erf’? Gert Minnaar, practising conveyancer at the Illovo branch of STBB Attorneys and serving SAARDA committee member. Municipality regarding what constitutes a ‘registered erf’. This rule apparently states that an erf in a newly proclaimed or formalised township, which is still held by virtue of the township title by the township applicant, is not regarded by the GIS system as a ‘registered erf’. * Erven – A civil engineering term meaning a South African a plot of land, usually urban, marked off for building purposes. TRANSFER OF A SERVICED ERF DIRECTLY FROM THE TOWNSHIP TITLE IS LEGAL AND GENERAL PRACTICE In the normal course of the business of a developer in the affordable housing market, the product on sale is a serviced erf in a township, linked to a building package to construct a house on that erf. A contractor can also obtain the right from a township owner to market such a serviced erf linked to a building package for the purchaser. The township owner gives transfer of the serviced erf to the purchaser in terms of section 43(5)(a) of the Deeds Registries Act, 1937 (No47 of 1937), where it provides that the transfer of a whole erf from the township title is possible. Simultaneously with this transfer the end user mortgage bond which finances the purchase of the serviced erf and the construction of the house as set out in the building agreement, is registered too. FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS OF THIS BUSINESS RULE This rule forced the developers, instead of transferring the serviced erf directly to the purchaser from the township title, to first create a separate title deed for any such erf still held under the township title, either by registering a Certificate of Registered Title for the specific erf or one Certificate of Registered Title for the identified batch of erven for which building plans must be submitted for approval. In terms of rands and cents, the developer has to provide for the following additional costs: • The recommended tariff for the registration of a Certificate of Registered Title for one erf at the time amounts to R3 850 conveyancing fee plus R305 Deeds Office charges. • If separate Certificates of Registered Title for 100 stands have to be registered it could cost the developer R385 000 in conveyancing fees plus R30 500 Deeds Office charges for these 100 separate Certificates of Registered Title. www.saaffordablehousing.co.za