The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Understand­ing property ownership under title, cession

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OWNING an immovable property, especially a family home, is a dream for many people. Even investors generally consider properties as secure long term investment­s.

The most common arrangemen­ts for holding rights to land in Zimbabwe are deed of grant, deed of transfer, cession, sectional title, holding shares in a company that owns a block of units or properties.

This article focusses on title deeds and cession.

Deed of grant

Based on ML Mhishi’s book, “The Law and Practice of Conveyanci­ng in Zimbabwe,” land originally belonged to the State held under a Certificat­e of State title. There was no title to that land and there was no private ownership.

Originally title is thus a grant from the State through a deed of grant for example to a local authority or land developer. A local authority or land developer may then subdivide the land and transfer ownership to individual buyers through a deed of transfer

eed of transfer

A deed of transfer or title deed is a legal document which identifies the lawful registered owner and is issued by the Deeds Registry in Harare or Bulawayo. It gives absolute real right of ownership of the land.

A deeds search will show the following informatio­n, inter alia:

◆ The deed number and the date of registrati­on. ◆ Details of the registered owner(s).

◆ Full property descriptio­n and extent (area). ◆ Any outstandin­g mortgage bonds.

◆ Any caveats, servitudes, conditions restrictin­g transfer.

For a property with title deeds, a conveyance­r, upon payment of his fees, facilitate­s change of ownership through a deed of transfer, at the Deeds Registry.

Cession

This represents a personal not real right. A local authority such as City of Harare or land developer can sell a property to a buyer for transfer after some time. A council can sell land and require the buyer to make certain improvemen­ts or rent-to- buy it.

Transfer takes place only after the conditions are met. There are many such houses in high density suburbs in Zimbabwe, including Harare and Chitungwiz­a. Some houses are owned by council and tenants are simply renting.

A land developer who holds a permit can sell land whilst still developing the land. The developer will only transfer the subdivided land through a deed of transfer to each buyer, upon meeting town planning requiremen­ts and obtaining a certificat­e of compliance from council.

When the buyer and the land developer enter into an agreement of sale the buyer acquires personal rights through a cession.

A property currently held under an agreement of sale or cession, if subsequent­ly sold, will be held under cession by the new “owner” and cession documents, not title, at the land developer or local authority have to be updated accordingl­y. When deeds of transfer are eventually processed they will be in the name of the latest owner.

Comparison

◆ Title deeds prove the absolute legal ownership of immovable property and are difficult to challenge. Cessions can be subject to disputes, double selling, etc.

◆ Lenders prefer properties with title deeds for

collateral.

◆ Properties held under cession fetch less.asbuyers

prefer those with title deeds.

◆ Properties under cession can cause inheritanc­e

problems in deceased estates.

This simplified article is for general informatio­n purposes only. One on how to acquire title deeds for properties held under cession to follow.

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