Sunday, 5th February
Property Term Glossary - Page 5
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Glossary of terms » Page 5 »


The most common Property terms used in the industry:


Resolutive Condition
A clause in an agreement of sale or lease which has the effect that the agreement will terminate on the occurrence of an event specified in the clause. Contrast this with a suspensive condition: see below. A typical example of a resolutive condition is a condition in an agreement of sale of a
proposed sectional title unit stating that the agreement will terminate if the sectional title plan is not registered before or on a certain date.

Restrictive Conditions of Title
Conditions stipulated in the title deed of a property prohibiting the building of certain improvements on the property or limiting the use to which the property may be put. A typical example is a condition in a title deed starting that a house must have a tile roof.

Right of Pre-emption
A contractual right entitling a person to make the first offer to purchase a particular property.
Also known as a right of first refusal. Lease agreements sometimes provide that, should the lessor wish to sell the property, the lessee has a right of pre-emption to purchase it.

Servitude
A registered right which a person has over the immovable property of another. It usually entitles the holder of the servitude to do something on the property. A common example is a registered right of way to travel over property owned by another.

Subdivision
When land is subdivided, it is divided into two or more portions. A specific legal and technical procedure must be followed.

Suspensive Condition
A clause in agreement of sale or lease in terms of which the agreement will become enforceable only if the event stipulated in the clause occurs. A typical example is a clause in an agreement is subject to the suspensive condition that the purchaser obtains a loan from financial institution before or on a certain date.

Title Deed
A document filed in a deeds office containing details of a property and its owner. A title deed is proof of a person’s ownership of a defined property; if other persons have rights over the property (for
Example where a financial institution holds a mortgage bond over the land), details thereof are also endorsed (recorder) on the title deed.

Trust Account
A bank account in which the account holder holds money in trust for another person until the occurrence of a certain event. The money in such an account is referred to as trust money.
Every estate agency business must have a trust account which must be auditor every year.

Unrehabilitated Insolvent
An insolvent whose estate is controlled in terms of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936.
Generally stated, an insolvent automatically becomes rehabilitated (ie. ceases to be an insolvent)
10 years after he has been declared insolvent.

Voetstoots
‘As is’. If a voetstoot clause is included in an agreement of sale of immovable property, it means that the seller cannot be held liable for latent defects in the property, ie. defects which are not visible
upon a reasonable inspection of the property, such as a leaking roof. A voetstoots clause does not, however, protect a seller who knows about a latent defect but fails to disclose this in order to defraud
the purchaser.

Zoning
Zoning limits the purpose for which a property may be used, eg. residential, commercial, industrial, educational, etc.