RETIREMENT VILLAGE
Life
rights for senior citizens in retirement villages: A checklist for attorneys
WARNING: This does not constitute legal advice. You are however strongly advised to seek legal advice on this topic of retirement villages. It is complicated matter.
General
Introduction
The laws applicable to
entitlement in respect of immovable property has seen dramatic changes brought
about by modern society. Retirement villages (RVs) are being built in every
province and retired people buy into these RVs – some to their financial
detriment while others are completely satisfied. Some 24 years ago the Housing Development
Schemes for Retired Persons Act 65 of 1988 (the Act) was promulgated. The main
purpose of the Act is to regulate the RV industry.
Retired persons should look
out for a RV that will suit their special needs best. Some RVs provide medical
care, high security and related facilities and some cater specifically for the
elderly who are debilitated.
Retired persons want a safe
haven that will care for them in their old age while they can live relatively independently.
Such a person is prepared to buy ‘life rights’ in a RV. It is referred to in
the Act as a ‘housing interest’, which is available exclusively to those who
are 50 years or older. ‘Life rights’ and ‘housing interests’ should be treated
as different names of the same thing.
This section of the commercial
sector in South Africa is heavily regulated by about 20 statutes, regulations,
municipal bylaws and charters applicable to the elderly. This article will only
describe in concise terms the applicability of the Act.
There were some drastic
changes and new additions to the statutory laws in the past 24 years. The Act
has been amended three times and the regulations were amended once. The Aged
Persons Act 81 of 1967 (interlinked with the Act) has been repealed in its
entirety and was replaced by the Older Persons Act 13 of 2006 and regulations.
The documentation of any home
for the aged in operation and registered prior to 1 April 2010 should therefore
be inspected closely to bring it in line with the requirements of the Older
Persons Act and its regulations.
A housing scheme for retired
persons should not be confused with a development scheme in terms of the
Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986 or a share block scheme in terms of the Share
Blocks Control Act 59 of 1980.
A retired person is someone
who is 50 years or older. In other statutes, such as the Older Persons Act, the
threshold is 65 years or older for males and 60 years or older for females.
These life rights are normally
sold the first time by the developer or by estate agents. A person who sells a
housing interest for the first time is also a developer.
The
agreement should be in writing (s 2)
It is obligatory that the
agreement be reduced to writing and signed by all the parties. If the contract
is signed by agents, the agent’s authority should be in writing. The law
pertaining to contracts entered into by trusts and/or companies to be formed is
intact and should be followed implicitly (s 2).
If a client has not signed a
written agreement, regard should be had to s 8(2), which might come to the
rescue of a seemingly hopeless situation.
Checklist
for the contents of the contract (s 4)
Section 4 prescribes the
contents of the agreement.
Below is a checklist based on
s 4:
• The names of the purchaser
and the seller and their residential or business addresses.
• What is the legal basis for
the housing interest?
• How long will the person
have the right of occupation?
• Is the housing interest
registerable?
• Has the title deed been
endorsed that it is subject to a housing development scheme?
• Is the property described
properly? In what magisterial district is it located?
• Is the seller the registered
owner? If not, who is?
• If someone else is the
owner, more information is required, for instance, on what basis does the
seller sell the life rights? The contact details of the owner should be
available.
• Is the land subject to a
mortgage bond? If it is, how much is outstanding? How much of the purchase
price will be used by the seller to repay the mortgage bond?
• How much will the life
rights cost?
• What is the amount of
interest payable annually? What is the rate?
• If payable in instalments,
how are the instalments calculated?
• When are these instalments
due?
• Have you received a
certificate issued by the architect or quantity surveyor that the RV was
erected in accordance with the approved plans? If not, when will it be
received?
• If there are house rules,
where are these kept and when can they be inspected? What kind of services or facilities
do you buy? Are there nursing care and frail care available? Are these services
and facilities available to you? Is the RV mainly for debilitated people?
• What official language do
you want the contract to be in?
• When will you be able to
move in and when will the risk pass?
• Whose responsibility is it
to take out insurance?
• Is there an amount payable
as endowment, betterment or enhancement levy, a development contribution or anything
similar? If yes, to whom and how much is outstanding?
• Who will pay for the
contract and the transfer of the life right?
• If the seller is the owner
of the land, he or she should assure you that he or she will not take out a
further mortgage bond.
• If you are entitled to have
the land transferred to you, when and how much will you have to pay? Who will attend
to the transfer?
• You should be given an
estimate for the next three years what the expenditure for the control,
management and administration of the RV and all the services and facilities
will be. It must also be clear who will be liable to pay it and assurance must
be given that you will not be billed for it over and above your monthly levy.
• The levy should be clearly
spelled out for at least two years in advance.
• If you have not received the
architect’s or quantity surveyor’s certificate, you may cancel the agreement
and institute a claim, or you may abide by the agreement and not pay any
interest.
• Exactly how many life rights
are there in the housing development scheme?
• The management structure or
proposed management structure should be spelt out.
• The regulations can
prescribe anything else that should be included into the contract.
The
title deeds should be endorsed (s 4C).
The title deeds of the
property should be endorsed that it is subject to a housing development scheme,
failing which a person may be fined R20 000 (maximum) or alternatively
sentenced to five years’ imprisonment.
Endorsements are prescribed by
the regulations relating to the Endorsement of Title Deeds published 31 August
1990. Any developer may request the registrar to endorse the title deeds, even
if it is not necessary to have them endorsed.
If
the housing interest is sold for the first time (s 6)
If a housing interest is sold
for the first time, the developer should give the purchaser the following three
documents:
• A certificate by an
architect or quantity surveyor that the housing scheme has been erected
substantially in accordance with the approved building plans and not in
contravention of any bylaws. This certificate should also state that the
building is sufficiently completed for the purposes of the scheme.
• The purchase agreement that
complies with section 4 of the Act.
• A certificate that the title
deeds to the land have been endorsed to the effect that the property is subject
to the housing development scheme.
A developer may not receive
any consideration or any part of it, without giving these three documents to
the purchaser. If he or she does, and he or she is subsequently found guilty
for being in default, in a criminal trial he or she may be fined R20 000 or
alternatively be sentenced to five years’ imprisonment.
The deposit may, however, be
paid into the trust account of an attorney or an estate agent. If the deposit
is paid to the developer, he or she should give the purchaser an irrevocable
guarantee issued by a financial institution that the money will be paid back to
him or her if the developer fails to perform in terms of the agreement.
However, if the developer becomes insolvent, then the money paid becomes
immediately due and payable to the purchaser.
RVs
exclusively for retired persons (s 7)
The right to occupy this
property is reserved exclusively for the retired person or spouse and nobody
else. All the owners may grant written consent to someone else than a retired
person to occupy the land. Contravention hereof is an offence and liable on
conviction with a fine of maximum R1 000 or six months’ imprisonment.
You should therefor
differentiate between ownership and the right to occupy the property. In
essence it means that a person younger than 50 years of age may be the
registered owner of that specific property, but is excluded from living there
until he/she attains the age of 50.
Consequences
of contracts that are void or cancelled (s 8)
There are various consequences
that flow from contracts that are void or cancelled.
Section 8(1) is very involved
and should be read with great care.
Consequences
of defective contracts (s 8(2))
It is quite clear that a
contract should be in writing and signed by the parties, failing which it is of
no force or effect.
Section 2(1) is unequivocal
about this; it is, however, subject to s 8(2).
The legislature made provision
for those occasions where there is no written contract. If a purchaser has made
full payment and the land has been transferred to him or her, then this
alienation is valid from the beginning. The same applies to a housing interest
that has been transferred.
Relief
the court may grant (s 9)
This section assists the
purchaser first and foremost and sets out the relief a court may grant in
respect of disputed contracts.
If a contract does not comply
substantially with s 3 (the language the contract has been written in) or s 4
(the contents of the contract), the purchaser has a claim. If the seller has
failed to comply with any obligation of the contract or has contravened any
provision of a regulation and the purchaser has suffered any prejudice, then litigation
might ensue. It is extremely wide and may be abused by purchasers who are at
loggerheads with sellers or developers.
The court retains its wide
discretionary powers supplemented by s 9. A court may –
• in addition, reduce the
interest rate applicable if it is just and equitable;
• order rectification of the
contract; or
• declare it void ab initio; or
• grant alternative relief.
The
regulations
If a housing development
scheme is erected in terms of the Act then these regulations are applicable.
If it is developed in terms of
the Sectional Titles Act or as a share block scheme in terms of the Share
Blocks Control Act, then regulations 7 to 14 are not applicable.
Definitions such as
‘accommodation’, ‘common property’, ‘facilities and services’, ‘housing
development scheme’, ‘the managing agent and the managing agreement’ should be
looked at carefully.
The developer is under
compulsion of the law to have a host of prescribed documents ready to give to
an intended purchaser. It is safe to state that the contents of most of these
documents were already alluded to in the discussion above about the contents of
the contract (s 4).
The penalty for noncompliance
is R 6 000 or 3 years’ imprisonment.
Conclusion
The Act is not perfect.
It is an attempt to regulate
the market and to protect a retired person. These housing schemes are very
popular and in high demand. If the contract complies substantially with the law
as stated above, it might be assumed, all other things being equal, that it is
relatively safe to enter into such a contract. If a developer is diligent, he
or she should consult a lawyer before embarking on such a development scheme.
This article was first published in our Attorney's magazine DE REBUS 2013. DE REBUS granted me permission to publish it on my blog and I do acknowledge their consent herewith: Thank you.