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Notes de cours

Law of Property notes

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I have summarised the lecture notes from Amanda Barret and colour coded everything to appear in a neat and concise manner. Notes have been summarised so that all relevant information is in the notes. Covers the whole year of the course

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  • 18 janvier 2022
  • 99
  • 2020/2021
  • Notes de cours
  • Amanda barret
  • Toutes les classes

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Par: amberaerinb • 2 année de cela

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Monday, 01 March 2021

Property Law week 1: Lecture notes


What is a thing?

• Res nulius (the thing of nobody.. belongs to nobody). Can become private if it is captured
by you

• If the thing escapes from your possession then it is no longer yours

• How is this in modern SA: Game Theft Act states that things that escape will stay private
property if one has an adequate game fence.

• One can claim back their private property by by using the rei vindictio remedy (but only if
they are still the owner)



Property Law in the legal system

1) Patrimonial: Property, succession and obligations

2) Family and Persons



The sources

- Roman-Dutch common law
- Legislation
- Customary Law
- Constitution
- Apartheid Law still impacts property law even though no longer in force


Ownership of a thing

• Most important real right

• In rem: Property/ real right (Servitude)

• In personam: personal right (contractual agreement)




1

, Monday, 01 March 2021
Apartheid and colonial law
• By 1913 19% of the land was set aside for Africans, it was a bit expanded in 1936

• Most people in SA were deprived of their citizenship



Land tenure in the apartheid territories

• System of access to the land was modeled on Customary law

• Barely any africans owned land

•Form of tenure called quit-rent, roman dutch law, but Africans didn’t have the ownership
security



Urban areas
• Group Areas Acts of 1950 and 1966

• For Africans particularly:

• Blacks (Urban Areas Consolidation Act 25 of 1945); Black Local Authorities Act 102
of 1982

– Created the townships, they could not own land, they only had access

– No real rights (eg ownership)

– Various insecure and temporary resident rights (if held permit) eg site permits,
residential permits, lodgers’ permits, certificates of occupation and hostel
permits

• Government policy since 1994 reacts to this history of precarious and insecure access
to land.

• Policy is to provide people with real rights (that can be registered) because such rights
are less vulnerable to abuse and are more secure.

• There is also a clear preference for making it possible for people to own their
property.




2

, Monday, 01 March 2021



Changing the law post-apartheid
• Abolition of Racially Based Land Measures Act of 1991 abolished most apartheid
land laws

• Prevention of Illegal Squatting Act 1951 [repealed and replaced by]:

• Prevention of Illegal Evictions Act 1998

• Group Areas Acts 1950 and 1966 [repealed and replaced by]

• Restitution of Land Rights Act 1994

• Housing Act 1997

• Interim Protection of Informal Lands Rights Act

• Lands Act [1913; 1936 and apartheid successors] [repealed and replaced by]

• Restitution of Land Rights Act 1994

• Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act 1996 & 1997

Interim Protection of Informal Lands Rights Act 19




African Customary Law

• Source of property law

Roman Dutch Law

• A real right (property right) is a right to a thing. This lies at the heart of the system

• It is theorized as the right of an individual

• But system recognized co-ownership (eg marriage in community of property)

• Companies treated as individuals

Customary Law

• Focus on ‘access to’ the resources (rather than ‘ownership of’)




3

, Monday, 01 March 2021
• Access depends on membership of a community and membership of a particular
family/house.

• “Nested systems” co-ordinate the resources within the community. If you are a
member of a household you can do things on the property. You have access to the
materials on the land



• Customary law (like all law) is subject to the Constitution.



Customary law regarding land
• Applied in the former apartheid territories in terms of the Communal Land Rights
Act 2004 (Act has now been found unconstitutional)

• Might apply in terms of additional land acquired under the Restitution of Land
Rights Act 1994

• Could possibly apply in the context of the Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act 1996

Land in urban areas

• Formal land and occupation rights acquired under the common law (emphasis on
registration in the Deeds Office). This is a real right under common law.

• Informal practices (eg in informal settlements) seem to be mirrored on common-law
practices (eg stand cards or rent paid by backyarders). Stand cards look like real
rights (but are not). Rent is a contractual (personal) right.

• Residence with family often based on customary law rules and practices (ie it’s based
on a relationship and not on a property right).

Other family property (excluding land in rural areas)

• Usually arise in context of family law and law of succession

– Disputes about access to urban housing usually arise in these contexts

– In particular, could arise in the context of a support duty

Legislation
• Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994

• Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937



4

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