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PVL2002H: Property Law SEMESTER 1 NOTES R80,00
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PVL2002H: Property Law SEMESTER 1 NOTES

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**Please note: these were notes made in 2022 therefore I have reduced the price but the syllabus overlaps.** Everything you need to know for the exam including: - feedback from all quizzes -notes from the textbook - latin terminology section - real rights, personal rights and servitudes...

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  • May 22, 2022
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  • 2021/2022
  • Class notes
  • A barratt
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Property law: June Exam Notes
**These are key points taken from Amanda Barratt’s notes and based on text from “The Principles of the Law of
Property in South Africa”. SOME parts are directly quoted, others have been simplified by me. I do not take credit
for any knowledge expressed in this document, only the summary of notes and easy access to key points that I found
important**


DISTRIBUTION OF THIS DOCUMENT IS ILLEGAL

Bibliography

- Barratt, Amanda. “Property Law [1-8]” 22 May 2022.
- Pope, A., Du Plessis, E. & Badenhorst, P. n.d. The principles of the law of property in South
Africa.


Latin Terms
 Res, rem,rei re: things
 Res nullius: thing that belong to nobody
 Ius in re aliena: right in the thing/property of another
 Utilitas: utility
 servitutes perpetuas causas habere debent: Servitude must promote the
use and enjoyment of the dominant tenement permanently
 Delivery longa manu: This form of delivery is effected by the seller
pointing out the object that will be sold to the buyer (say if the size or
physical delivery of the object is too difficult)
 facta probanda: facts that need to be proved
 Locus standi: the right or ability to bring a legal action to a court of law
 Quasi: almost
 spoliatus ante omnia restituendus est: possession must be restored
before anything else
 status quo ante: the way things were before
 Ius possessionis: Right against dispossession that arises from the mere
fact of possession
 Ius possidendi: Right of possession
 Ante omnia: before all else




Lecture 2: real rights, personal rights and servitudes

Real rights
 either ownership
 or limited real rights (servitudes or real security rights)

,  A person is a legal subject
 Means that they can hold rights and duties
 Rights and duties can only be held by legal subjects


 Other rights to property are derived from ownership and have a more
limited content. If they are real by nature, and are held by someone other
than the owner of the property, they are typified as limited real rights
(i.e. iura in re aliena)

Real Rights and Personal Rights
 real rights establish a direct relationship between the person and the
property
 Physical things are the ‘objects’
 E.g. a house
 real rights are dealt with in property law
 Real rights are therefore protected by proprietary remedies
 real rights are transferred either by way of registration (in the case of
immovable property) or delivery (in the case of movables)


 personal rights establish a relationship between one person and another in
respect of a delictual or contractual obligation, called a ‘performance’
 In personam
 Performances are the ‘objects’
 E.g. baby sitting
 governed by the law of obligations (i.e. contract, delict and unjustified
enrichment)
 personal rights are protected by the availability of contractual and
delictual remedies
 Contractual remedies egg: specific performance, action for breach of
contract and full consequential loss
 Personal rights are a weaker claim because you may not be able to find
person you have the claim against/ they may not be able to
pay/compensate
 transferred by way of cession



Personalist theory

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