BUY THAT HOUSE! YOU’RE OFF THE HOOK FOR THE SELLER’S MUNICIPAL DEBTS
A recent Pretoria High Court judgment has come to the rescue of property buyers being pressured by the local municipality to pay the previous owner’s debts.
When you buy a property, the municipality won’t issue the seller with a “clearance certificate” – necessary for the transfer of the property to you - until all rates and taxes, water and electricity accounts etc due for the 2 years prior to transfer have been paid in full.
But there’s a problem when the seller’s debts are older than 2 years. The municipality cannot force the seller to pay those historical debts by holding back transfer.
And - until this latest judgment - you were the softest target for the municipality’s debt collection department. It could cut off your electricity and water. It could threaten to have your property sold in execution. And you could end up shelling out a lot of money to settle someone else’s debts – R6,5m was claimed from one of the buyers in this matter.
If fear of that happening to you held you back from buying a house, relax - that’s all changed. Holding that “In the absence of an agreement to that effect, a new or subsequent owner ….. is not liable for the payment of historical debts incurred by previous owners or occupiers”, the Court declared the provision allowing such action by the municipality to be constitutionally invalid. It seems likely that this will be confirmed by the Constitutional Court and adopted by all the other High Courts.
December's Newsletter
When you buy a property, the municipality won’t issue the seller with a “clearance certificate” – necessary for the transfer of the property to you - until all rates and taxes, water and electricity accounts etc due for the 2 years prior to transfer have been paid in full.
But there’s a problem when the seller’s debts are older than 2 years. The municipality cannot force the seller to pay those historical debts by holding back transfer.
Relax; you’re no longer the soft target
And - until this latest judgment - you were the softest target for the municipality’s debt collection department. It could cut off your electricity and water. It could threaten to have your property sold in execution. And you could end up shelling out a lot of money to settle someone else’s debts – R6,5m was claimed from one of the buyers in this matter.
If fear of that happening to you held you back from buying a house, relax - that’s all changed. Holding that “In the absence of an agreement to that effect, a new or subsequent owner ….. is not liable for the payment of historical debts incurred by previous owners or occupiers”, the Court declared the provision allowing such action by the municipality to be constitutionally invalid. It seems likely that this will be confirmed by the Constitutional Court and adopted by all the other High Courts.
December's Newsletter