Are you liable for interest on municipal rates accounts not received?

“I purchased my first house a few months ago and have never received a municipal rates and taxes account from the municipality. I tried a few times to call the municipality but no one got back to me. When I eventually went to the municipality, I was informed that I am in arrears and that they have charged me interest even though I never even received an account. Can they do this?”

The short answer is they can. According to the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 municipalities have the power to charge interest on municipal accounts in arrears over residential properties. The Local Government: Municipal Property Rates Act 6 of 2004 does require a municipality to provide you with a written account of your rates and taxes, but further provides that you will be held liable for payment of your rates and taxes regardless of whether you received the written account from the municipality or not. It is assumed that it is common to expect that your municipal rates and taxes will be due from time to time and non receipt of a municipal account cannot therefore be used to avoid liability.

This means that you cannot be exempted from paying arrear rates and taxes, including interest thereon, purely based on non-receipt of the written account from the municipality. It remains your responsibility as owner to do all the necessary and obtain the necessary information from the municipality if you do not receive regular accounts and stay up to date with your account. However, should you dispute the account or interest charged if may be useful to engage the assistance of your attorney to liaise with the municipality and help ensure that your account has been correctly charged. 

Go to the municipality and make the necessary enquiry in the event that you do not receive a written account. Your enquiry must be made in writing. You can either send an e-mail to the relevant department at the municipality or go to the municipality with a letter of request. 

April 16, 2021
Exclusive use areas: Is your new space truly yours?

Exclusive use areas: Is your new space truly yours?

An exclusive use area can be defined as “a part or parts of the common property” in a scheme that is indicated on a sectional plan and designated for the exclusive use of an owner of a section. In simple terms, an exclusive use area refers to those portions in a scheme to which a certain owner has exclusive use rights, such as a garden, parking bay, or balcony. This is in contrast to common property, which is owned and shared by the body corporate.

Can a body corporate withhold a clearance certificate?

Can a body corporate withhold a clearance certificate?

Once an offer to purchase is signed and the transfer process begins, sellers of units in a sectional title scheme face several challenges, including the obligation to ensure that all dues to the body corporate are settled. This requirement, mandated by Section 15B(3)(a)(i)(aa) of the Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986, restricts the transfer of sectional titles unless a conveyancer’s certificate confirms that all monies due to the body corporate have been paid or provisions satisfactory to the body corporate have been made. A conveyancer can however only issue the required certificate after receiving a body corporate’s assurance, in the form of a levy clearance certificate, that all amounts due to the body corporate have been paid or that provision for payment thereof has been made.

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